The Rise and Fall and rise again of

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The Rise and Fall (and rise again? ) of Digital Earth Keith Clarke Karl

The Rise and Fall (and rise again? ) of Digital Earth Keith Clarke Karl Grossner

Gerhard Mercator: Terrestrial globe, Ø 41 cm, 1541 © Österreichische Nationalbibliothek

Gerhard Mercator: Terrestrial globe, Ø 41 cm, 1541 © Österreichische Nationalbibliothek

Mary Baker Eddy Library for the Betterment of Humanity 1935

Mary Baker Eddy Library for the Betterment of Humanity 1935

Figure The Geoscope, as drawn by Tom Shannon, for the Buckminster Fuller Institute “This

Figure The Geoscope, as drawn by Tom Shannon, for the Buckminster Fuller Institute “This giant, 200 -foot diameter sphere will be a miniature earth -- the most accurate global representation of our planet ever to be realized. " "This…Geoscope would make it possible for humans to identify the true scale of themselves and their activities on this planet. Humans could thus comprehend much more readily that their personal survival problems related intimately to all humanity's survival. " — R. Buckminster Fuller, 1962

Gore’s Earth in the Balance (1992) “A multi-resolution, three dimensional representation of the planet,

Gore’s Earth in the Balance (1992) “A multi-resolution, three dimensional representation of the planet, into which we can embed vast quantities of georeferenced data. ”

Gore’s Digital Earth “Imagine, for example, a young child going to a Digital Earth

Gore’s Digital Earth “Imagine, for example, a young child going to a Digital Earth exhibit at a local museum. After donning a head- mounted display, she sees Earth as it appears from space. Using a data glove, she zooms in, using higher and higher levels of resolution, to see continents, then regions, countries, cities, and finally individual houses, trees, and other natural and man-made objects. Having found an area of the planet she is interested in exploring, she takes the equivalent of a ‘magic carpet ride’ through a 3 -D visualization of the terrain. Of course, terrain is only one of the numerous kinds of data with which she can interact. Using the system’s voice recognition capabilities, she is able to request information on land cover, distribution of plant and animal species, real-time weather, roads, political boundaries, and population. She can also visualize the environmental information that she and other students all over the world have collected as part of the GLOBE project. This information can be seamlessly fused with the digital map or terrain data. She can get more information on many of the objects she sees by using her data glove to click on a hyperlink. To prepare for her family’s vacation to Yellowstone National Park, for example, she plans the perfect hike to the geysers, bison, and bighorn sheep that she has just read about. In fact, she can follow the trail visually from start to finish before she ever leaves the museum in her hometown. She is not limited to moving through space, but can also travel through time. After taking a virtual field-trip to Paris to visit the Louvre, she moves backward in time to learn about French history, perusing digitized maps overlaid on the surface of the Digital Earth, newsreel footage, oral history, newspapers and other primary sources. She sends some of this information to her personal e-mail address to study later. The timeline, which stretches off in the distance, can be set for days, years, centuries, or even geological epochs, for those occasions when she wants to learn more about dinosaurs. ” (U. S. Vice President Al Gore, in a speech written for presentation at the California Science Museum, Los Angeles, January 1998)

World wide participation

World wide participation

The NASA web site

The NASA web site

Dot. gov participation • • • • IDEW (interagency Digital Earth Working Group) ISDE

Dot. gov participation • • • • IDEW (interagency Digital Earth Working Group) ISDE (International Society for Digital Earth) NOAA USGS USACE EPA USDF NSF Open. GIS Consortium GSDI ISO University of Maryland ESRI

Digital Earth Symposia • • • Beijing (1999) New Brunswick, Canada (2001) Brno, Czech

Digital Earth Symposia • • • Beijing (1999) New Brunswick, Canada (2001) Brno, Czech Republic (2003) Tokyo (2005) Auckland (2006) San Francisco (2007) “Bringing Digital Earth Home”

Consensus definition 1999 • Digital Earth will be a virtual representation of our planet

Consensus definition 1999 • Digital Earth will be a virtual representation of our planet that enables a person to explore and interact with the vast amounts of natural and cultural information gathered about the Earth. (Consensus definition adopted at 2 nd interagency workshop, 1999 Sept 23)

Google Earth: A history • Keyhole Earthviewer. In-Q-tel funding, Dual use • Google Maps

Google Earth: A history • Keyhole Earthviewer. In-Q-tel funding, Dual use • Google Maps • Google buys Keyhole (Oct. 2004) • Google Earth (June 2005) • Google Earth Community added • Partnership with National Geographic

Geobrowser demo Karl Grossner movie

Geobrowser demo Karl Grossner movie

Digital Earth • • Is Google Earth Digital Earth? NO: because Geobrowser + Global

Digital Earth • • Is Google Earth Digital Earth? NO: because Geobrowser + Global data Possibly several browsers – NASA Worldwind (2003) – Geo. Fusion Geo. Player (2001) – ESRI Arc. Globe

Google. Earth

Google. Earth

NASA Worldwind

NASA Worldwind

Arc. Globe: 3 D Analyst Extension

Arc. Globe: 3 D Analyst Extension

Global maps • Crosses boundary between – MAPS – IMAGERY – TOPONYMY

Global maps • Crosses boundary between – MAPS – IMAGERY – TOPONYMY

Global Maps • International Millionth Map of the World • VMAP 0 (DCW) •

Global Maps • International Millionth Map of the World • VMAP 0 (DCW) • Global. Map

The Millionth Map of the World Project • German Geographer Albrecht Penck (1858 -1945)

The Millionth Map of the World Project • German Geographer Albrecht Penck (1858 -1945) was a major proponent of consistent and accurate maps to represent the entire planet, including its natural and human features. • Penck proposed a worldwide system of maps at the Fifth International Geographical Conference in 1891. • International Map of the World, would consist of 2500 individual maps, each at a scale of 1: 1, 000 • Each map would represent four degrees of latitude and six degrees of longitude. • 1913, Penck's idea came to fruition when an international conference was held to establish standards for the maps, which also became known as the Millionth Map of the World due to the map series' scale. • The 1913 standards established that maps would use the local form of each place name in the Roman alphabet (thus, languages that use other alphabets would need to transliterate their place names).

Australia Series (Part)

Australia Series (Part)

International Map of the World • • Each map would have a legend printed

International Map of the World • • Each map would have a legend printed in English and French and the title of the maps would be written in French, Carte Internationale du Monde au 1 000. Following the Paris conference, the "Central Bureau of the Map of the World" was established at the offices of Great Britain's Ordnance Survey. After 1913, over three dozen countries began to produce maps. By World War I only eight maps, out of 2500 had been produced. In 1921, the American Geographic Society took it upon themselves to produce the map sheets for the countries of Central and South America. They worked from 1921 to 1946 to produce 107 maps, a project that cost the organization $570, 000. By the 1930 s, 405 maps had been produced although only half adhered to the standards of the project. World War II, the project suffered because the Bureau offices, along with the archives and data for maps, were destroyed by bombing. The newly-created United Nations took control of the Millionth Map project in 1953 but international interest slackened. By the 1980 s, only about 800 to 1000 total maps had been created and the U. N. stopped issuing their regular reports about the status of the project

Planned remote sensing systems from CCRS (Canada) http: //www. ccrs. nrcan. gc. ca CARTOSAT-1

Planned remote sensing systems from CCRS (Canada) http: //www. ccrs. nrcan. gc. ca CARTOSAT-1 (IRS-P 5) Planned launch date: 2004, Pan: 2. 5 m CARTOSAT-2 (IRS-2 A) Planned launch date: late 2004, Pan: 1 m CBERS 3 (China/Brazil) Planned launch date: 2005, Resolution (Panchromatic): 5 m EROS A 1 (USA/Israel) Launch date: 05 -DEC-2000 Resolution (Panchromatic): 1. 8 m, Altitude: 480 km EROS B 1 Planned launch date: 2004 Pan: 0. 8 m, Altitude: 600 km EROS B 2 Planned launch date: 2004 Pan: 0. 8 m, Multispectral: 3. 3 m, Altitude: 600 km Ikonos Launch date: 24 -SEP-1999 Pan: 1 m, Multispectral: 4 m, Altitude: 680 km IRS-1 D Launch date: 29 -SEP-97 Pan: 5. 8 m, Altitude: 800 km Orb. View-4 Launch occurred on September 21, 2001 * Satellite did not reach orbit = bankruptcy! Orb. View-3 Launched 26 -JUN-2003 Pan: 1 m Multispectral: 4 m Quick. Bird 2 (renamed as Quick. Bird) Launch date: 18 October 2001 Pan: 0. 61 m, Multispectral 2. 44 m RADARSAT-2 Planned launch: 2004, SAR: 3 m SPIN-2 Launch date: 17 -FEB-1998 Digitized/Scanned Film Pan: 1. 56 m, Altitude: 220 km SPOT 5 Planned launched 3 -MAY-2002 Pan: 2. 5 m, Multispectral: 5 m

Planned remote sensing systems from http: //www. itc. nl/~bakker/launch-table. html Planned for 2004 CBERS-2

Planned remote sensing systems from http: //www. itc. nl/~bakker/launch-table. html Planned for 2004 CBERS-2 China/Brasil, 20 m Planned for 2004 Top. SAT UK, 2. 5 m 2004 Kompsat-1 Korea, topo mapping 2005 Eagle. Eye Germany, 5 -7 m 17 March 2002 GRACE, USA/German, gravitational field and shifting water mass Planned for late 2005 METOP-1 ESA (Europe’s NASA), weather 1 km 6 Jan 2003 Coriolis/Wind. Sat USA, wind speed 30 June 2004 NOAA-N USA, weather 1 km 13 Jan 2003 ICESat (EOS-LAM) USA, Ice sheet 2005 GOES-O USA, weather 1 km 25 Jan 2003 Sorce USA, Solar radiance 2005 Terra. SAR-L 1 Germany/UK 1 -30 m SAR Planned for early 2004 IRS-P 6, India 2005 Terra. SAR-X 1 Germany/UK 1 -30 m SAR India, Resourcesat, 10 m pan, 23 m 2010 Terra. SAR-2 Germany/UK 1 -30 m SAR June 2003 DMSP-16 USA, weather, 500 m 2007 GOES-P USA, weather 1 km 2008 GOES-Q USA, weather 1 km Jan 2004 GOES-N USA, weather, 1 km Planned for mid 2010 METOP-2 ESA, weather 1 km

Issues • • Linking text, maps and imagery: Fusion Making maps and images text

Issues • • Linking text, maps and imagery: Fusion Making maps and images text searchable Data structures Global grids

Colorado State system

Colorado State system

Geofusion

Geofusion

New global/spatial grids: QTM

New global/spatial grids: QTM

Go 2 Grids 38: 53: 22. 08 N 077: 02: 06. 86 W US.

Go 2 Grids 38: 53: 22. 08 N 077: 02: 06. 86 W US. DC. WAS. 54. 18. 28. 83. 11 US. CA. SBA. UCSB. UCEN