Google Earth impacts science

Published: Aug. 1, 2006 at 1:38 PM

BONN, Germany, Aug. 1 (UPI) -- The world's scientists are increasingly using Google Earth's digital globe, which has also attracted millions of non-scientists around the world.

Although Google Earth wasn't intended for scientific work -- merely as an entertainment feature -- the Google search engine's extraordinary globe has become useful for such widely differing functions as tracking diminishing ice sheets, locating crime scenes and monitoring volcanoes, Der Spiegel reported Tuesday.

Shortly after Hurricane Katrina struck the U.S. mainland, Google Earth added 8,000 post-disaster aerial photographs of flooded areas, helping disaster workers locate passable roads and other data, the newspaper said.

The free Google Earth basic program consists of hundreds of thousands of satellite and aerial photos that are updated periodically. The increasing popular program allows users to view their homes or any other area of interest around the world in a matter of seconds.

Google Earth's popularity among ordinary users is influencing the entire scientific community. "Google Earth offers globally available data in a very straightforward manner," Klaus Greve of the Geographic Institute at the University of Bonn told Der Spiegel. "It's also very appealing to researchers who were previously intimidated by (geo-information systems) software."

© 2006 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
COL BKB: Purdue 64, Central Mich. 38 (15 min)
WHO: H1N1 deaths near 8,000 (18 min)
Mich. man's model train project wows (23 min)
COL BKB: Georgetown 97, Lafayette 64 (39 min)
McIlroy/McDowell lead dwindles in China (46 min)
Gold coin found in Ill. Christmas kettle (51 min)
Big public holiday parties out this year
fark
If you put a sheep named Rob into a shopping cart and then pushed it into a supermarket, the police...
Hero: Danvers HS students want to sell "Free Meep" shirts to raise money for scholarship. Asinine:...
In the never-ending quest by the government to encourage everyone buy new stuff, comes "Cash for...
It was Mrs. Woods, in the driveway, with the golf club
Can you be blamed for sleepwalking crimes? It's not news, it's fearmongeri...er...ABC News
They took away radio traffic reporters' airplanes, and now they're taking away their radio too