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Street View goes to the Amazon
August 17, 2011
With
Google Street View
, you can do amazing things such as
hike around Stonehenge
or even
ski down Whistler’s slopes
—all without leaving home. Soon, you’ll be able to float down the Amazon and Rio Negro Rivers of northwest Brazil and experience some of the most remote and biodiverse areas in the world.
A few members of our Brazil and U.S. Street View and
Google Earth Outreach
teams are currently in the Amazon rainforest using our Street View technology to capture images of the river, surrounding forests and adjacent river communities. In partnership with the
Amazonas Sustainable Foundation (FAS)
, the local non-profit conservation organization that invited us to the area, we’re training some of FAS’s representatives on the imagery collection process and leaving some of our equipment behind for them to continue the work. By teaching locals how to operate these tools, they can continue sharing their points of view, culture and ways of life with audiences across the globe.
We’ll pedal the
Street View trike
along the narrow dirt paths of the Amazon villages and maneuver it up close to where civilization meets the rainforest. We’ll also mount it onto a boat to take photographs as the boat floats down the river. The tripod—which is the same system we use to capture
imagery of business interiors
—will also be used to give you a sense of what it’s like to live and work in places such as an Amazonian community center and school.
Image of the Tumbira community in the Rio Negro Sustainable Development Reserve
In this first phase of the project, the Google and FAS teams will visit and capture imagery from a 50km section of the Rio Negro River, extending from the Tumbira community near Manaus—the capital of the state of Amazonas—to the Terra Preta community. We’ll then process the imagery of the river and the communities as usual, stitching the still photos into 360-degree panoramics.
Image of the Tumbira Community
For many outdoor enthusiasts, travelers and environmentalists, this creates an opportunity to experience the wonders of the Amazon, which will be accessible in a way they’d previously only dreamed about. We’re honored to work with FAS on this project to bring the Amazon online for those who can’t visit in person, and help our partners share with the world the unique stories of its inhabitants and the beauty of this place they call home.
View Larger Map
Click the above album for more photos of our team's work in the Amazon, and the communities with which they're working.
Update 8/18/11:
We've added a photo album to this post.
Posted by Karin Tuxen-Bettman, Google Earth Outreach, and Karina Andrade, Google Street View
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