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Lab 1-Google Earth Exercise

This document provides instructions for familiarizing oneself with the program Google Earth. It outlines how to navigate in Google Earth using the search bar or manual movement tools. It also describes how to measure distances and gradients using the ruler tool and provides examples measuring features at Niagara Falls. Finally, it notes some options that can be changed like units of elevation or exaggerating terrain features.

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Jayajith Vk
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50% found this document useful (2 votes)
229 views4 pages

Lab 1-Google Earth Exercise

This document provides instructions for familiarizing oneself with the program Google Earth. It outlines how to navigate in Google Earth using the search bar or manual movement tools. It also describes how to measure distances and gradients using the ruler tool and provides examples measuring features at Niagara Falls. Finally, it notes some options that can be changed like units of elevation or exaggerating terrain features.

Uploaded by

Jayajith Vk
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Lab- GOOGLE EARTH INTRODUCTION

Google Earth is a great tool to visualize and explore many of the geologic features that we will discuss
in this class. This program is free and easy to use. This first Google Earth assignment will focus on
familiarizing you with the program and some of the tools. Since it’s not always possible to go to the
field, the next best thing is using Google Earth. This is a practical and useful program that has many
applications.

NOTICE: Google Earth updates versions periodically. If this occurs the instructions in the labs for this
chapter may refer to the older version of the program.

If Google Earth is not already installed on the computer you are using, then please do the following:

1. Go to http://earth.google.com

2. Click on the Download Google Earth tab at the top of the page, review the Privacy Policy, and click
Agree and Download to download the latest version.

3. Save the file to your desktop, open it and follow the instructions to install.

4. Open Google Earth.

Before we begin the assignment, let’s first familiarize ourselves with Google Earth.

Read each step and spend a few minutes trying things out, which will make things easier later. Also
note that the Mac and PC versions of Google Earth are a little different.

Take the time to learn how to navigate it now.

Step 1 – Navigation

Watch each of the tutorial videos at: http://www.google.com/earth/learn/beginner.html#navigation.

It is important that you dedicate time to review these virtual resources to help you better understand
Google Earth and its capabilities. These will be key to mastering the tool.

Navigating in Google Earth can be done in two ways:

First, you can use the Search panel in the upper left hand side of the screen.

Just type in a location, address, or coordinate and it will zoom into the position (give it a try now).

The Second approach is that you can also navigate manually:

• To move position you can left click with the mouse and drag the map or click on the hand icon in the
upper right corner.

• You can zoom in and out using the mouse wheel, by right clicking and dragging the mouse up or
down, or by sliding the lowest bar in the upper right corner.

• Click and hold the mouse wheel in order to rotate the map (left and right) or tilt the scenery (up and
down). This can also be done using the arrows surrounding the eye icon in the upper right corner.

Along the bottom of the image it gives several important pieces of information:

1. Latitude and Longitude

2. Elevation in reference to sea level


3. Eye altitude, which indicates how zoomed in or out you are.

For example, let’s check out Niagara Falls. In the Search panel in the upper left, type in Niagara Falls,
NY. To better tell where the Falls are, you want to zoom out a little bit. Notice your eye altitude along
the bottom right. Use the minus button for the zoom until you are at ~10,000’ eye altitude.

Check your latitude (~43o04’39”N – read as 43 degrees, 4 minutes, and 57 seconds North) and
longitude (~79o04’28”W). It will move as you move your cursor across the screen, as will your
elevation. If you want to see a picture of the Falls, just click on one of the many photo icons to see
one. Note that the river is headed in a general northerly route – you can zoom in close to see the
actual Falls.

Also important to understand with navigation is the concept of bearing. A bearing is the compass
direction as measured between two points. It can be expressed as an azimuth bearing in degrees
between 0 and 360, as along a circle. 0 and 360 degrees would be north, 90 degrees would be east,
south would be 180 degrees, and west would be 270 degrees (Figure below).

Figure | A compass displaying the degrees.

Bearing can be useful in determining how to get from point A to point B. To measure a bearing in
Google Earth, follow this procedure. You want the bearing from point A to point B. Locate point A.
Select the Ruler tool. Measure from A to B.

In the last line in the Ruler tool box, read the Heading in degrees – that is measuring bearing (Tip:
when point A is very far from point B, it can be helpful to add a placemark. Once at point A, choose
the item in the menu bar right above the image that looks like a yellow pushpin. That is a placemark.
Place it at point A. Also add a placemark at point B. Zoom out far enough that you can see both
placemarks, then use the ruler tool to measure the heading between them. This works well for
measuring headings across the entire United States). Let’s practice getting a bearing again with
Niagara Falls. For this example, point A will be the Scotiabank Convention Center located at
43o04’34.08”N and 79o05’05.98”W. Point B will be the name label for Goat Island (located across the
river, just before the Falls begin).

The bearing from point A to point B is ~74 degrees.


Step 2 – Measuring

In order to examine features, we will need to be able to measure them, which is easily managed in
Google Earth. Measuring is done using the Ruler Tool, which can be accessed either by clicking the
ruler icon in the toolbar above the image or by selecting from the menu across the top Tools, then
Ruler.

There are two options with the ruler tool, line and path. The line option (which is the default option)
gives the distance and direction between two points; notice the pull down menu that gives 11 different
options for units of measurements. To make a measurement, after you have selected the ruler tool,
you simply click on two different points. The path option gives the distance for a set of two or more
points giving the ability to measure a distance that isn’t a straight line.

NOTE: When measuring features you want to use the Map Length – using the ground length can lead
to an incorrect answer.

Gradient will often be measured for this. Gradient is similar to slope which indicates how steep or flat
an area is. It is calculated as the difference in elevation divided by the horizontal distance. When
calculating gradient, maintain the same units in the numerator and denominator.

Gradient = change in elevation/horizontal distance

Let’s practice again at Niagara Falls. First move the image slightly higher to fully see the start of the
white water, just before the Falls begin (do this by left clicking the mouse and using the hand to move
the image). With the eye altitude still at ~10,000’, let’s measure the distance across the river right at
the start of the whitewater before the Falls (where the whitewater stops).

First click your ruler icon, then select a point on one side of the river, then move your mouse straight
across to the other side. In feet, this should measure ~4,800 feet (don’t stop at the island – measure
all the way to the other river bank). Using the pull-down menu, you can change the feet to miles, and
the result should be ~0.9 miles.

Now let’s practice gradient across the actual Falls. Position your cursor over the actual Falls, and zoom
in to an eye altitude of ~1,000 feet. Hold your cursor over the top of the Falls and record the elevation
(remember, this is located along the bottom bar).

Now move your cursor to the bottom of the Falls and record the elevation. The change in elevation
(highest-lowest) will be your numerator. Use the Ruler tool to measure the distance between the two
places – this will be your horizontal distance (the denominator). There will be variation in this answer
depending on your exact spot along the Falls, but results should be similar to this:

Gradient = (500’ – 325’) / 75’ = 175’/75’ = 2.3

Step 3 – Changing the Options

For a few tasks it will be important to change some of the default settings on Google Earth in order to
see a feature better or make your work easier. These changes can all be made by going to Tools in the
menu bar across the top, then

Options in the PC version (for the MAC, go to Google Earth, then Preferences).

1. Changing the unit for Elevation – From the 3D view tab, in the middle of the box there is a section
entitled “Units of Measurement” that you can change between metric and English units.
2. Exaggerating Features – Since differences in elevations are much smaller than geographic distances
it is sometimes hard to see features. To exaggerate features (that is, make a mountain look taller than
it actually is in order to see it better), click on the 3D view tab, in the lower left side at the “Terrain”
section of the box, look for “Elevation Exaggeration (also scales 3D buildings and trees)”. If you want
to exaggerate a feature increase this value up to 3. To view the area without any exaggeration, return
the value to the default of 1.

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