
The overall result is that anything that is moving cannot be properly imaged in 3D. It is also possible that more than two passes are combined, and we have even come across one case where it appears that Google combined imagery from completely different flights months apart.

Based on previous analysis, the 3D imagery is captured by taking four images in rapid succession from an aircraft and then another four later on on a separate pass. This is because of the way the 3D imagery is captured. “I have long been an admirer of the pollinator garden program of the NH Audubon Society and hopefully this photography collection will inspire folks to explore this program and create a garden at their own homes.While exploring Google Earth’s 3D imagery, you will probably have noticed that even in the busiest cities, people are largely absent.

Having a keen interest in using native plants in the built environment, volunteering at the pollinator garden is a perfect fit both to get away from the computer and to experience the life cycles of the plants first hand. She studied botany at UNH and landscape architecture at UCLA and is licensed in both CA and NH.
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A lifelong lover of nature, she has shown this love through her work as a landscape architect and through her photography. There will be an artists reception on April 11, from 4-6pm.Ī volunteer at the McLane pollinator garden, Kate loves to document its beauty and changes through her photography. Kate Osgood’s photography documents A Garden Story – The pollinator garden at the McLane Center, taking us through the life cycle of the garden, from buds to birds and all of the changes, and visitors, in between.
