![]() Amongst the flying seagulls made of medium-density fibreboard, outline images of North Sea cod made from plastic chip forks, rock pool-themed pottery, and much more, there are photographs and a short (roughly 7 minute) film made by Dewi Roberts. The mixed media show features textiles, ceramics, paintings, photographs, sculpture and films. Google Earth gives people the chance to explore the entire surface of the planet from their desktop with just a few easy clicks.‘Ar Lan y Môr’ / ‘At the Edge of the Sea’ is exhibiting at Aberystwth Arts Centre from 15 th May to 8 th July 2018, and features the work of a range of Welsh artists who responded to an open call. Massive Herd of Water Buffalo, Kigosi Game Reserve, Tanzania (4☁7’21.49? S 31☂3’46.46? E)īut there are some cool and unbelievable images that are worth checking out on Google Earth and here are 20 of the most amazing ones.Ĭome Downtown and Play, Memphis, Tennesse, USA (35.141533, -90.052695) People can see the deepest of oceans and even 3D images of buildings. Heart-Shaped Land Formation, New Caledonia, France (20★6’15.47?S, 164☃9’30.1 NARRATOR: A mysterious formation carved out of the Earth gone unnoticed for thousands of years. HUGH NEWMAN: It's really, really striking when you first see it. NARRATOR: Is it an ancient megalithic structure made to be seen from the sky? TRAVIS TAYLOR: The Badlands Guardian looks artificial. NARRATOR: And could it be not only a link to mankind's extraterrestrial ancestors MARCIA MOORE: So you have to ask yourself, who were they emulating? NARRATOR: but one that holds the key to their return? GEORGE HAAS: We learned their codes and their secret symbolism, and what we're seeing probably holds a key to our legacy. NARRATOR: There is a doorway in the universe. It demands we question everything we have ever been taught. 53-year-old grandmother Lynn Hickox is scanning GPS driving directions to a local museum on satellite view when something catches her eye: a geographical feature that bears a striking resemblance to a human face. It looks so much like a man-made structure that she posts the image on a message board. Almost overnight, the image goes viral and becomes known far and wide as the "Badlands Guardian." It is quite striking. The brow, the nose, the lips, the chin are well formed. The headdress a little less so, but clearly could be seen as feathers. The Badlands Guardian appears to be a huge geoglyph near Alberta, Canada. ![]() And to see it from Google Earth or from satellite imagery, you would think it was created by people many, many years ago. ![]() "Geo" means Earth, and glyphs are symbols, so "geoglyph" means symbols on the Earth. ![]() They can be geometric designs, they can be animals, they can be faces. Some of them are carved into the ground, like we find in Nazca. And in some places they're built up, mounds built up on the Earth. ![]() The Badlands Guardian is a bust, or a head and shoulders presentation, of a male indigenous person. It is so striking, because that is the indigenous people of the area. It doesn't look like a Scotsman wearing a kilt. It looks like an indigenous, uh, native to the area. NARRATOR: Is it possible that the likeness of a human face naturally formed in the Earth? Many who have examined the Badlands Guardian suggest that, based on the amount of detail it displays, this is highly unlikely. ![]()
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