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Watch California Transform Through Time With This Incredible Satellite Dataset

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Watch California Transform Through Time With This Incredible Satellite Dataset

If you have’t taken a moment to appreciate the fact that hundreds of Earth-orbiting satellites are photographing our planet right now, and that this is a goddamn technological wonder, here’s your opportunity.

Meet Open California: a new project unveiled this month by Planet Labs, a team of ex-NASA scientists dedicated to imaging the entire world and sharing the data with developers. Planet Labs currently operates the largest constellation of Earth-imaging satellites, over 100. By 2016 it hopes to have round-the-clock coverage of the entire planet.

Watch California Transform Through Time With This Incredible Satellite Dataset

San Francisco, Golden Gate Bridge & Marin. Captured on 10-22-2014 by a Planet Labs Dove satellite

Watch California Transform Through Time With This Incredible Satellite Dataset

Agricultural fields near El Rio Villa in California’s Central Valley

With diverse landscapes that are being shaped by both natural forces (tectonic activity, climate change) and human elements (agriculture, irrigation, development), California is in many ways the ideal testing ground to realize the full potential of a continuous, high-quality satellite dataset. “There are a few reasons we chose California for our first open data release,” Planet Lab’s Rachel Holm told Gizmodo in an email. “There’s a range of landscapes—mountains, coastlines, large cities, agriculture, deserts— that can be used for a diverse set of projects across a lot of industries and interests. California has a large developer community, too....and we’re excited to learn about the insights they find and the unique applications they build.”

So far, the database includes archival imagery from RapidEye satellites (from October 2013 onward) and Dove satellites (from August 2015 onward), but it’s being updated every two weeks with new data from both. Best part? The data is all available under a Creative Commons license. If you’re a researcher or developer with a compelling reason to explore the sunshine state’s changing landscapes through time, you can use Open California for free—provided any products you create are also open-access.

But if you, like me, are mainly just interested in geeking out over some Earth porn, there are a few demos you can check out right now. Watch the Sierra snowpack grow and recede, visualize the dramatic impact of drought on Folsom Lake, or check out the changing colors of agriculture in the Central Valley. Enjoy!


Follow the author @themadstone

Images via Planet Labs


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