Climate Change

Time flies in Google Earth’s biggest update in years

Check out this perspective from Liza Goldberg, a Stanford student, NASA intern and climate change educator.

For the past 15 years, billions of people have turned to Google Earth to explore our planet from endless vantage points. You might have peeked at Mount Everest or flown through your hometown. Since launching Google Earth, they’ve focused on creating a 3D replica of the world that reflects our planet in magnificent detail with features that both entertain and empower everyone to create positive change.

In the biggest update to Google Earth since 2017, you can now see our planet in an entirely new dimension — time. With Timelapse in Google Earth, 24 million satellite photos from the past 37 years have been compiled into an interactive 4D experience. Now anyone can watch time unfold and witness nearly four decades of planetary change.

Our planet has seen rapid environmental change in the past half-century — more than any other point in human history. Many of us have experienced these changes in our own communities; I myself was among the thousands of Californians evacuated from their homes during the state’s wildfires last year. For other people, the effects of climate change feel abstract and far away, like melting ice caps and receding glaciers. With Timelapse in Google Earth, we have a clearer picture of our changing planet right at our fingertips — one that shows not just problems but also solutions, as well as mesmerizingly beautiful natural phenomena that unfold over decades.

To explore Timelapse in Google Earth, go to g.co/Timelapse — you can use the handy search bar to choose any place on the planet where you want to see time in motion.

Or open Google Earth and click on the ship’s wheel to find Timelapse in our storytelling platform, Voyager, to see interactive guided tours. We’ve also uploaded more than 800 Timelapse videos in both 2D and 3D for public use at g.co/TimelapseVideos. You can select any video you want as a ready-to-use MP4 video or sit back and watch the videos on YouTube. From governments and researchers to publishers, teachers and advocates, we’re excited to see how people will use Timelapse in Google Earth to shine a light on the issues facing our planet.

See the difference the Suruí people have made through their protection of the Amazon rainforest they call home in Rondônia, Brazil

Watch agriculture take shape in the middle of a desert in Al Jowf, Saudi Arabia

Follow the expansion of Las Vegas, Nevada

See what’s changed in Kuwait City, Kuwait

Understand the causes of Earth’s change

We worked with experts at Carnegie Mellon University’s CREATE Lab to create the technology behind Timelapse, and we worked with them again to make sense of what we were seeing.

As we looked at what was happening, five themes emerged: forest change, urban growth, warming temperatures, sources of energy, and our world’s fragile beauty. Google Earth takes you on a guided tour of each topic to better understand them.

Timelapse in Google Earth shows the rapid change on our planet in context through five thematic stories, for example the retreat of the Columbia Glacier in Alaska.

Putting time on Earth in the palm of our hand

Making a planet-sized timelapse video required a significant amount of what we call “pixel crunching” in Earth Engine, Google’s cloud platform for geospatial analysis. To add animated Timelapse imagery to Google Earth, we gathered more than 24 million satellite images from 1984 to 2020, representing quadrillions of pixels. It took more than two million processing hours across thousands of machines in Google Cloud to compile 20 petabytes of satellite imagery into a single 4.4 terapixel-sized video mosaic — that’s the equivalent of 530,000 videos in 4K resolution! And all this computing was done inside our carbon-neutral, 100% renewable energy-matched data centers, which are part of our commitments to help build a carbon-free future.

As far as we know, Timelapse in Google Earth is the largest video on the planet, of our planet. And creating it required out-of-this-world collaboration. This work was possible because of the U.S. government and European Union’s commitments to open and accessible data. Not to mention their herculean efforts to launch rockets, rovers, satellites and astronauts into space in the spirit of knowledge and exploration. Timelapse in Google Earth simply wouldn’t have been possible without NASA and the United States Geological Survey’s Landsat program, the world’s first (and longest-running) civilian Earth observation program, and the European Union’s Copernicus program with its Sentinel satellites.

Melanie Boylan

Mad about Social Media and supporting Start Ups and Small Businesses. I can train, consult and manage business owners social media platforms for their business. Writer/SMM @Irish_TechNews | #tech | #bitcoin | #Blogger |#Networking | #training | #Sponsor | #Speaker | #womensinspire | #socialmedia | #nerd

Recent Posts

AI FORWARD > Supercomputing the Future: Rare Open Day at Ireland’s Most Advanced AI Infrastructure

CloudCIX, in conjunction with AlloComp, will host AI FORWARD > Supercomputing the Future, a one-day…

10 hours ago

MTU to Host National Workshop on Strengthening Rural Life and the Future of Farming

Munster Technological University (MTU) will host a major stakeholder workshop exploring the future of rural…

12 hours ago

Pendulum Summit returns Friday, January 23rd

Pendulum Summit kicks off this Friday for the 12th year, founded by Irish International rugby…

13 hours ago

Accelerating Clean Transport: Tyndall Researchers Driving New Research to Integrate Electric Buses in Ireland

Tyndall National Institute was awarded six projects from SEAI’s National Energy Research, Development & Demonstration…

14 hours ago

ServiceNow and OpenAI collaborate to deepen and accelerate enterprise AI outcomes

ServiceNow the AI control tower for business reinvention, and OpenAI has announced an enhanced strategic…

15 hours ago

Celebrating Tomorrow’s Leaders: TY TrailblazHER Award

TrailblazHER - TU Dublin’s flagship gender equality initiative - has opened nominations for the 2026…

17 hours ago

More about Irish Tech News


Irish Tech News are Ireland’s No. 1 Online Tech Publication and often Ireland’s No.1 Tech Podcast too.


You can find hundreds of fantastic previous episodes and subscribe using whatever platform you like via our Anchor.fm page here: https://anchor.fm/irish-tech-news


If you’d like to be featured in an upcoming Podcast email us at Simon@IrishTechNews.ie now to discuss.


Irish Tech News have a range of services available to help promote your business. Why not drop us a line at Info@IrishTechNews.ie now to find out more about how we can help you reach our audience.


You can also find and follow us on Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and Snapchat.