Google Maps Launches 3-D Snorkel View Of The World's Greatest Reefs
Rebecca Boyle
at 05:02 AM Sep 27 2012
Manta Ray Snorkel View A diver from the Catlin Seaview Survey team is seen on location on the Great Barrier Reef, viewed at the Street View level in Google Maps.
Google/Caitlin Seaview Survey
Tech // 

Google Maps just unveiled a new ocean-level street view, which we'll call Snorkel View, allowing anyone with an Internet connection to virtually dive with sea turtles other creatures in some of the world's most pristine coral reefs. You can use the Street View tool in several tropical locales to zoom in and swim with the fishes.

"Now, anyone can become the next virtual Jacques Cousteau and dive with sea turtles, fish and manta rays in Australia, the Philippines and Hawaii," Brian McClendon, vice president of Google Maps and Earth and a self-described snorkeling enthusiast, wrote on the Google blog.

Google already has a suite of exclusive Street View imagery featuring locales that would be difficult to visit, from the Amazon basin to Antarctica, and even up close at Kennedy Space Center.

The images are from the Catlin Seaview Survey, a series of scientific expeditions to explore and survey Earth's coral reefs. On shallow-water expeditions, divers are using a specially designed tablet-operated underwater camera, the SVII, to capture the images. On deep-water dives, the survey plans to use robots and HD cameras. The project is funded by a private insurance entity called Caitlin Group Ltd., which has already funded environmental surveys in the Arctic.

The survey will take up to 50,000 360-degree panoramic images that will be added to Google Maps, focusing on areas in the Great Barrier Reef and locations in the Philippines and Hawaii. 


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