Google has put the devastation of March’s Japanese tsunami in hauntingly stark relief, with the discharge of a brand new Street View feature that covers the country’s most ravaged regions. It is all component of an initiative to “digitally archive” the aftermath of this year’s earthquake and tsunami, with Street View images captured across some 44,000 kilometers of Northeastern Japan. The panoramic, 360-degree photos cover both inland and coastal regions, allowing users to retroactively trace the trail of destruction across Fukushima and other areas, while placing them at ground level amidst a graveyard of battered homes and abandoned buildings. Google hopes this archive might be useful scientists to achieve a more in-depth understanding of the wear and tear wreaked by natural disasters, while preserving the memory of these who suffered most. It’s viscerally eerie, powerful and, primarily, tragic. Make sure you on the source link below.
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