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The World Lost an Oklahoma-Sized Area of Forest In 2013, Satellite Data Show

merbs writes Oklahoma spans an area in the American South that stretches across almost 70,000 square miles. That's almost exactly the same area of global forest cover that was lost in a single year. High resolution maps from Global Forest Watch, tapping new data from a partnership between the University of Maryland and Google, show that 18 million hectares (69,500 square miles) of tree cover were lost from wildfires, deforestation, and development the year before last. The maps were created by synthesizing 400,000 satellite images collected by NASA's Landsat mission.

1 of 143 comments (clear)

  1. This map is highly suspect by Karmashock · · Score: 5, Informative

    I live near some of this area. There has been no fire or logging in the area and yet it is marked pink.

    I'm also seeing a lot of areas that are pink that don't seem very likely to be involved in logging or forest fires. I mean, look at rural alaska.

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