![]() RELATED VIDEO: Greta Thunberg Speaks at the Climate Action Summit in New York Most of the images are from Landsat, a joint USGS/NASA Earth observation program that's been watching the planet since 1970, and they were made interactively explorable by Carnegie Mellon University CREATE Lab's Time Machine Library. ![]() The wide-ranging project is comprised of more than 24 million satellite photos from the past 37 years, and took more than 2 million processing hours across thousands of machines in Google Cloud, Rebecca Moore, the director of Google Earth, Earth Engine & Outreach, said in a blog post. Google Earth recently launched Timelapse, a global, interactive video that lets users track changes across the Earth over the past three decades, including the impact of the climate emergency. ![]() Thanks to Google Earth's latest project, you no longer need a time machine to travel back to days of yore. ![]()
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