Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Google's Carbon Cycle Maps

An important application:
Google Earth has a new application that shows carbon dioxide in different layers of the earth's atmosphere. Tyler Erickson, a geospatial researcher at the Michigan Tech Research Institute in Ann Arbor, responded to a competition call from Google asking scientists to present research results using KML, a data format used by Google Earth. This is what he came up with - an app that illustrates for us the carbon cycle, a deeper understanding of which can impact everything from mainstream understanding of carbon emissions to environmental policy.

Erickson said, "I tried to think of a complex data set that would have public relevance." NASA reports that it lead him to work with data from NASA-funded researcher Anna Michalak of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Michalak develops complex computer models to trace carbon dioxide back in time to where it enters and leaves the atmosphere. With this information, we now have a great visual way to see and understand the carbon cycle, seeing in color where carbon dioxide is cycled into the earth through plants and water or where it hangs in the higher levels of the atmosphere.

We talk often about how mapping can make people greener thanks to the impact visuals can have on our understanding. This new layer can help scientists explain the carbon cycle to people so that habits and policies can hopefully be influenced for the better.
Making it easier to see impacts, making it easier to explain what needs to be done. Thanks Google.

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