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The Sharpest Ever Global Earth Map

Roland Piquepaille writes "The GLOBCOVER project, started by the European Space Agency (ESA), has a very simple goal. It will create the most detailed portrait of the Earth's land surface with a resolution three times sharper than any previous satellite map. The image acquisition will be done throughout 2005 and use the Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MERIS) instrument of the Envisat environmental satellite. To create this sharp map, the GLOBCOVER project will analyze about 20 terabytes of data gathered by the European satellite. When it's completed, the map will have numerous uses, 'including plotting worldwide land use trends, studying natural and managed ecosystems and modelling climate change extent and impacts.'"

7 of 204 comments (clear)

  1. 'hello mum' by thegoldenear · · Score: 5, Funny

    time to put something interesting on the roof for when the sat passes over

    1. Re:'hello mum' by Gulthek · · Score: 5, Funny

      Your joke is one line too long.

    2. Re:'hello mum' by Reaperducer · · Score: 5, Funny

      The satellite imagery for this is being recorded at a resolution of 300 m. For comparison, the most zoomed in you can get on GoogleMaps is 2 m per a pixel.

      But 300 is more than 2, so it must be better. That's why we're all salivating for 64-bit Minesweeper. Because it will be better than 32-bit Minesweeper.

      Haven't you learned anything from TV commercials?
      Digital is always better than analog, even when it isn't.
      More is always better than less, even when it isn't.
      More candy. More soda. More monkeys. More thermonuclear weapons.

      --
      -- I'm old enough to have lived through six different meanings of the word "hacker."
  2. Medium? by brianmf · · Score: 5, Funny

    The image acquisition will be done throughout 2005 and use the Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MERIS) instrument of the Envisat environmental satellite.

    Surely the High Resolution Imaging Spectrometer would be more appropriate?

  3. MERIS by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 5, Funny
    The image acquisition will be done throughout 2005 and use the Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MERIS) instrument of the Envisat environmental satellite

    Niles will be happy to hear she's orbiting the planet...

    --

    Obliteracy: Words with explosions

  4. I want my planet! by Renegade+Lisp · · Score: 5, Informative
    That looks all very well, but if you dig a little deeper into that site, you'll come across the page where ESA describes its licensing terms. This data is only gonna be given to (a) scientists who are deemed serious by ESA, and who will report twice a year about their findings, and (b) to commercial users at "market rates".

    Well but isn't this data for which I've paid with my tax euros already? Why does the public who financed it not get free access to that data?

    While we're at it, can other Slashdotters perhaps point to links of freely available satellite imagery? Is there any kind of systematic coverage of the planet we live on which is freely available to everyone who does happen to live here?

  5. 300m 15-bands... great for analysis, not pictures by PenguinOpus · · Score: 5, Informative

    Reading the article, it really is 300m/pixel. This is 400x lower resolution than the 15m Landsat data that is available as a basemap in Keyhole, Google Maps, and other providers.

    The reason this data is interesting is its 15-band nature and the amount of analysis and extraction that can be done from it.

    For pretty pictures, there are plenty of better sources.