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Net Assets: Armchair Earth

The ultimte armchair travel site, from outer space to your favourite literary place. By Toby Preston

May 14, 2022
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Pacific Island Living

May 14, 2022

This site is a literal wonderland in that it is ‘a land or place full of wonderful things’. It’s everything ‘earth’. From inside a cave to the top of a mountain, viewed from space or seen from a drone. This is the ultimate rabbit hole for armchair travellers. As the title page accurately says: ‘The world’s most detailed globe’, from there you simply hit the Launch Earth button and dive into a multitude of memorable destinations, fabulous photographs from street views to panoramic landscapes, documentary clips, arcane environmental information, literary locations in real life through to guided tours of UNESCO world heritage sites.

 If you’re looking for something or somewhere specific then open the search field and type in your query, or maybe just hit ‘I’m feeling lucky’ and get a random selection of destinations you have probably never heard of, for instance Gorky Central Park of Culture and Leisure, an amusement park in Moscow, Russia. You will then find that this place was opened on 12 August 1928 covers an area of 121 hectares and was named after Maxim Gorky. It also reveals that apart from a roller coaster, an Alpenblitz and a Jet Star 2 there is also a wacky worm show. Who would have known that those earnest Russians had come up with a venue for wacky worms in a place named after the founder of the socialist realism literary method? As with all these views, you get the compass co-ordinates and the option of street view, 2D and fly to your location and photosphere. Still feeling lucky? Then up comes Dunsinane Hill in Scotland, a familiar name from Shakespeare’s Macbeth, just keep clicking!

Another fascinating suggestion is Literary Locations in Real Life, choose this tour and you’ll be invited to visit seven different places with literary connections from Moseley Bog where J.R.R. Tolkien lived as a boy to Casa Gabriel in Columbia where you’ll see a picture of Gabriel García Márquez’s childhood home which is now a museum. After that flick forward to Stockholm for an image of the Mellqvist Cafe & Bar where Stieg Larsson’s fictional character Mikael Blomkvist enjoyed a coffee in the The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.

For some truly stunning photography and insights into everything from national parks to whale sharks and the natural treasures of cities (see New York’s peregrine falcons (left) or a colony of penguins wandering among South African beach goers), go to the Voyager button and be amazed at what’s on offer from the BBC, NASA, the National Geographic Society, the Wildlife Trust India and Jane Goodall (above).

Try out Google’s own street view presentation on an interactive journey up the 3000-foot El Captian rock climb in Yosemite National Park. Go behind the scenes for a video explanation of how they filmed this extraordinary panorama up the ‘Nose’ rock face by abseiling down the cliff with cameras and tripods strapped to their intrepid photographers.

Then if you’d like to check on our region’s volcanic history drop in on 10,000 Years of Volcanoes (left) and see an image of our globe with hundreds of pins representing the earth’s volcanic sites, click on any one and you’ll see photographs and detailed descriptions of each.

Book your ticket now for a free trip to armchair earth at www.google.com/earth

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