The Digital Earth:
Understanding our planet in the 21st Century
by Vice President
Al Gore
Given at
the California Science Center, Los Angeles, California, on January 31,
1998.
From - http://www.digitalearth.gov/
Direct
Link - http://www.digitalearth.gov/VP19980131.html
A new wave of technological innovation is allowing us to
capture, store, process and display an unprecedented amount of information
about our planet and a wide variety of environmental and cultural phenomena.
Much of this information will be "georeferenced" - that is, it will
refer to some specific place on the Earth's surface.
The hard part of taking advantage of this flood of
geospatial information will be making sense of it. - turning raw data into
understandable information. Today, we often find that we have more information
than we know what to do with. The Landsat program, designed to help us
understand the global environment, is a good example. The Landsat satellite is
capable of taking a complete photograph of the entire planet every two weeks,
and it's been collecting data for more than 20 years. In spite of the great
need for that information, the vast majority of those images have never fired a
single neuron in a single human brain. Instead, they are stored in electronic
silos of data. We used to have an agricultural policy where we stored grain in
Midwestern silos and let it rot while millions of people starved to death. Now
we have an insatiable hunger for knowledge. Yet a great deal of data remains
unused.
Part of the problem has to do with the way information is
displayed. Someone once said that if we tried to describe the human brain in
computer terms, it looks as if we have a low bit rate, but very high
resolution. For example, researchers have long known that we have trouble
remembering more than seven pieces of data in our short-term memory. That's a
low bit rate. On the other hand, we can absorb billions of bits of information
instantly if they are arrayed in a recognizable pattern within which each bit
gains meaning in relation to all the others — a human face, or a galaxy of stars.
The tools we have most commonly used to interact with data,
such as the "desktop metaphor" employed by the Macintosh and Windows
operating systems, are not really suited to this new challenge. I believe we
need a "Digital Earth". A multi-resolution, three-dimensional
representation of the planet, into which we can embed vast quantities of
geo-referenced data.
Imagine, for example, a young child going to a Digital
Earth exhibit at a local museum. After donning a head-mounted display, she sees
Earth as it appears from space. Using a data glove, she zooms in, using higher
and higher levels of resolution, to see continents, then regions, countries,
cities, and finally individual houses, trees, and other natural and man-made
objects. Having found an area of the planet she is interested in exploring, she
takes the equivalent of a "magic carpet ride" through a 3-D
visualization of the terrain. Of course, terrain is only one of the many kinds
of data with which she can interact. Using the systems' voice recognition
capabilities, she is able to request information on land cover, distribution of
plant and animal species, real-time weather, roads, political boundaries, and
population. She can also visualize the environmental information that she and
other students all over the world have collected as part of the GLOBE project.
This information can be seamlessly fused with the digital map or terrain data.
She can get more information on many of the objects she sees by using her data
glove to click on a hyperlink. To prepare for her family's vacation to
She is not limited to moving through space, but can also
travel through time. After taking a virtual field-trip to
Obviously, no one organization in government, industry or
academia could undertake such a project. Like the World Wide Web, it would
require the grassroots efforts of hundreds of thousands of individuals,
companies, university researchers, and government organizations. Although some
of the data for the Digital Earth would be in the public domain, it might also
become a digital marketplace for companies selling a vast array of commercial
imagery and value-added information services. It could also become a
"collaboratory"-- a laboratory without walls — for research
scientists seeking to understand the complex interaction between humanity and
our environment.
Technologies needed for a Digital Earth
Although this scenario may seem like science fiction, most
of the technologies and capabilities that would be required to build a Digital
Earth are either here or under development. Of course, the capabilities of a
Digital Earth will continue to evolve over time. What we will be able to do in
2005 will look primitive compared to the Digital Earth of the year 2020. Below
are just a few of the technologies that are needed:
Computational Science: Until the advent of computers, both experimental and
theoretical ways of creating knowledge have been limited. Many of the phenomena
that experimental scientists would like to study are too hard to observe - they
may be too small or too large, too fast or too slow, occurring in a billionth
of a second or over a billion years. Pure theory, on the other hand, cannot
predict the outcomes of complex natural phenomena like thunderstorms or air
flows over airplanes. But with high-speed computers as a new tool, we can
simulate phenomena that are impossible to observe, and simultaneously better
understand data from observations. In this way, computational science allows us
to overcome the limitations of both experimental and theoretical science.
Modeling and simulation will give us new insights into the data that we are
collecting about our planet.
Mass Storage: The Digital Earth will require storing quadrillions of
bytes of information. Later this year, NASAs
Satellite Imagery: The Administration has licensed commercial satellites
systems that will provide 1-meter resolution imagery beginning in early 1998.
This provides a level of accuracy sufficient for detailed maps, and that was
previously only available using aerial photography. This technology, originally
developed in the
Broadband networks: The data needed for a digital globe will be maintained by
thousands of different organizations, not in one monolithic database. That
means that the servers that are participating in the Digital Earth will need to
be connected by high-speed networks. Driven by the explosive growth of Internet
traffic, telecommunications carriers are already experimenting with 10
gigabit/second networks, and terrabit networking technology is one of the
technical goals of the Next Generation Internet initiative. The bad news is
that it will take a while before most of us have this kind of bandwidth to our
home, which is why it will be necessary to have Digital Earth access points in
public places like children's museums and science museums.
Interoperability: The Internet and the World Wide Web have succeeded because
of the emergence of a few, simple, widely agreed upon protocols, such as the
Internet protocol. The Digital Earth will also need some level of
interoperability, so that geographical information generated by one kind of
application software can be read by another. The GIS industry is seeking to
address many of these issues through the Open GIS Consortium.
Metadata: Metadata is "data about data." For imagery or
other georeferenced information to be helpful, it might be necessary to know
its name, location, author or source, date, data format, resolution, etc. The Federal Geographic Data Committee
is working with industry and state and local government to develop voluntary
standards for metadata.
Of course, further technological progress is needed to
realize the full potential of the Digital Earth, especially in areas such as
automatic interpretation of imagery, the fusion of data from multiple sources,
and intelligent agents that could find and link information on the Web about a
particular spot on the planet. But enough of the pieces are in place right now
to warrant proceeding with this exciting initiative.
Potential Applications
The applications that will be possible with broad, easy to
use access to global geospatial information will be limited only by our
imagination. We can get a sense of the possibilities by looking at today's
applications of GIS and sensor data, some of which have been driven by
industry, others by leading-edge public sector users:
Conducting virtual diplomacy: To support the
Fighting crime: The City of Salinas, California has reduced youth handgun
violence by using GIS to detect crime patterns and gang activity. By collecting
information on the distribution and frequency of criminal activities, the city
has been able to quickly redeploy police resources.
Preserving biodiversity: Planning agencies in the Camp
Predicting climate change: One of the significant unknowns in modeling climate change
is the global rate of deforestation . By analyzing satellite imagery,
researchers at the
Increasing agricultural
productivity: Farmers are already
beginning to use satellite imagery and Global Positioning Systems for early
detection of diseases and pests, and to target the application of pesticides,
fertilizer and water to those parts of their fields that need it the most. This
is known as precision farming, or "farming by the inch."
The Way Forward
We have an unparalleled opportunity to turn a flood of raw
data into understandable information about our society and out planet. This
data will include not only high-resolution satellite imagery of the planet,
digital maps, and economic, social, and demographic information. If we are
successful, it will have broad societal and commercial benefits in areas such
as education, decision-making for a sustainable future, land-use planning,
agricultural, and crisis management. The Digital Earth project could allow us
to respond to manmade or natural disasters - or to collaborate on the long-term
environmental challenges we face.
A Digital Earth could provide a mechanism for users to
navigate and search for geospatial information - and for producers to publish
it. The Digital Earth would be composed of both the "user interface"
- a browsable, 3D version of the planet available at various levels of
resolution, a rapidly growing universe of networked geospatial information, and
the mechanisms for integrating and displaying information from multiple sources.
A comparison with the World Wide Web is constructive. [In
fact, it might build on several key Web and Internet standards.] Like the Web,
the Digital Earth would organically evolve over time, as technology improves
and the information available expands. Rather than being maintained by a single
organization, it would be composed of both publicly available information and
commercial products and services from thousands of different organizations.
Just as interoperability was the key for the Web, the ability to discover and
display data contained in different formats would be essential.
I believe that the way to spark the development of a
Digital Earth is to sponsor a testbed, with participation from government,
industry, and academia. This testbed would focus on a few applications, such as
education and the environment, as well as the tough technical issues associated
with interoperability, and policy issues such as privacy. As prototypes became
available, it would also be possible to interact with the Digital Earth in
multiple places around the country with access to high-speed networks, and get
a more limited level of access over the Internet.
Clearly, the Digital Earth will not
happen overnight.
In the first stage, we should focus
on integrating the data from multiple sources that we already have. We should
also connect our leading children's museums and science museums to high-speed
networks such as the Next Generation Internet so that children can explore our
planet. University researchers would be encouraged to partner with local
schools and museums to enrich the Digital Earth project — possibly by
concentrating on local geospatial information.
Next, we should endeavor to develop
a digital map of the world at 1 meter resolution.
In the long run, we should seek to put
the full range of data about our planet and our history at our fingertips.
In the months ahead, I intend to challenge experts in
government, industry, academia, and non-profit organizations to help develop a
strategy for realizing this vision. Working together, we can help solve many of
the most pressing problems facing our society, inspiring our children to learn
more about the world around them, and accelerate the growth of a multi-billion
dollar industry.
[end of Gore speech]
Did you know that the Fifth International Symposium on Digital Earth will take place in several locations in the Bay Area?