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Artikkelin sisältö
Katso myös artikkelit:
Artikkelissa on nettilähteiden jälkeen valikoima “Time lapse/Google Earth Engine”- satelliittikuvia kaupunkien kehityksestä, kaksi “Earth at Night”- esitystä (sivusto ja video) sekä Flickrin albumina sateliittikuvia maapallon kaupungeista.
Nettilähteitä
- Wikipedia; Kaupungistuminen
- Wikipedia; Luettelo maailman suurimmista kaupunkiseuduista
- Wikipedia; Luettelo suurimmista kaupunkialueista väkiluvun mukaan
- YLE, Uutiset; 8.5.2014; Maailma kaupungistuu: Joka vuosi rakennetaan kahdeksan uutta New Yorkia
- National Geographic; A Tale of five Cities and how they grew
- The Guardian; Cities from scratch; Watch new cities rise from the desert, jungle and sea
Kapunkien kasvu: Story Maps; Esri; The Age of Megacities
Google Earth Engine-linkit:
Laita päälle “Low” (vuosiluvun alla)
Näkyvät vain pc: llä!
Maapallo yöllä:
Satelliittikuvia maailman kaupungeista
Landsat’s long historical record is particularly useful in tracking urban growth, particularly rapid growth. The 2014 Landsat 8 image on the right above represents the results of a growth spurt in urban and agricultural activity in and around Egypt’s capital city, Cairo. The area’s population grew from 6 to more than 15 million between that year and 1987, the date of the Landsat 5 image on the left. (Public Domain)
Twitteristä:
The fast-growing city of #Cairo has spilled onto desert plains well beyond the lush floodplain of the Nile River. The population grew from 12 million people in 1984 to more than 20 million now. Satellite images 🛰️🖼️ from @NASA_Landsat/@USGSLandsat. https://t.co/5G5IllU2sM pic.twitter.com/BK5AZMbZtk
— NASA Earth (@NASAEarth) April 2, 2020
From the air, photos expose the economic divide in cities where shacks border pristine new developments https://t.co/mXoM6Ci4QA
— National Geographic (@NatGeo) February 4, 2020
#30DayMapChallenge Day 22: Build Environment 🏨
Same idea as ‘yellow’ and another NYC #dataviz (!) but it looks cool! This viz shows the historic construction date of all current #newyork buildings. *Height exaggerated*
Data via: https://t.co/RZtQXYe8BG#maps #3d #animation pic.twitter.com/9A0VdifQt9
— Craig Taylor (@CraigTaylorGIS) November 22, 2019
From the air, photos expose the economic divide in cities where shacks border pristine new developments https://t.co/36KB89MP0W
— National Geographic (@NatGeo) October 8, 2019
Geographic divide between rich and poor in #Powai in #Mumbai in #India. This is an extreme example but similar less drastic examples can be found in many western cities too. Source: https://t.co/cpSvgZhYWw pic.twitter.com/37yRabknb8
— MapScaping (@MapScaping) September 8, 2019
From the air, photos expose the economic divide in cities where shacks border pristine new developments https://t.co/HZfi0gP77i
— National Geographic (@NatGeo) 3. heinäkuuta 2019
Created by Joey Cherdarchuk, “Breathing City” is a hypnotic visualization that tracks Manhattan’s working and resident population as they move from their home to their office https://t.co/mgvpRC6f3H pic.twitter.com/YP8HAptYIJ
— MapScaping (@MapScaping) 14. kesäkuuta 2019
#Map shows cities with over 10 million residents. Source: (link: https://t.co/F8FK14BX3w) pic.twitter.com/M5JYET21ra
— MapScaping (@MapScaping) 25. toukokuuta 2019
Cities don’t just spring up overnight. They evolve over years and decades. See how their shapes shift along the way https://t.co/2c6dEZy4og
— National Geographic (@NatGeo) 7. huhtikuuta 2019
This map shows the ten largest cities in the world from 1500 until today. This is of course only the view of one particular set of researchers. Remember how tricky historical demography is. Findings often vary significantly! Source: https://t.co/gMDkDvm0Y2 pic.twitter.com/G0GWgvcIbp
— MapScaping (@MapScaping) 24. maaliskuuta 2019