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A new Google Earth time-lapse feature lets you see how much the planet has changed in the past 37 years, and it’s pretty stunning what you can find.
If you want to go even deeper, you can use Google Earth's Timelapse feature, which will show you a swath of the Earth over time in video format, so you can watch the changes unfold year by year.
The Google Earth app is adding a new video feature that draws upon nearly four decades of satellite imagery to vividly illustrate how climate change has affected glaciers, beaches, forests and othe… ...
In the Timelapse section of Google Earth you can find numerous aerial photographs showing how various landscapes of our Planet have changed over the past years. Here's how to watch our planet's ...
The first historical feature launched in 2017 with Google Earth Timelapse, which lets you see how areas changed over a 35-year period.
From Las Vegas to Arctic glaciers, navigate through time and space as you explore changes to Earth’s surface over the last three decades. Timelapse: Landsat Satellite Images of Climate Change ...
If you're as nosy as I, Google Earth has just unveiled its own version of that same tool, complete with a timelapse function to watch towns build in mere seconds.
The Google Doodle for Earth Day 2023 is also utilising real-time imagery from Google Earth Time-lapse.
From Japan's erupting rock to Iraq's vanishing marshes, here's a look at some remarkable phenomena users have discovered since Google and TIME unveiled three decades ...
The breathtaking timelapse shows a beautiful, lesser-seen view of our planet. Scientists will study the images to help them to better understand Earth.
If you want to go even deeper, you can use Google Earth's Timelapse feature, which will show you a swath of the Earth over time in video format, so you can watch the changes unfold year by year.