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Google Earth Can Now Show You How Much the Planet Has Changed in 37 Years

By Todd Haselton, CNBC • Updated on April 15, 2021 at 11:04 am Google Google Earth received its first big update since 2017 on Thursday. A new time-lapse feature lets you see how much the planet has changed in the past 37 years, and it s pretty stunning what you can find. You can check it out by visiting g.co/Timelapse and entering in any location or browsing some of the featured locations. Google Earth received its first big update since 2017 on Thursday. The highlight is a new time-lapse feature that lets you see how much the planet has changed in the past 37 years, and it s pretty stunning what you can find.

Google Earth Can Now Show You How Much the Earth Has Changed in 37 Years

By Todd Haselton, CNBC • Updated on April 15, 2021 at 2:04 pm Google Google Earth received its first big update since 2017 on Thursday. A new time-lapse feature lets you see how much the planet has changed in the past 37 years, and it s pretty stunning what you can find. You can check it out by visiting g.co/Timelapse and entering in any location or browsing some of the featured locations. Google Earth received its first big update since 2017 on Thursday. The highlight is a new time-lapse feature that lets you see how much the planet has changed in the past 37 years, and it s pretty stunning what you can find.

Randy Milliron - About

Randy Milliron Member since: 2021 I live in beautiful Gillette, Wyoming and we are Coal Country. In fact the City of Gillette s motto is The Energy Capital of the Nation as 40-60% of the Nation s energy needs come from Campbell County (oil, gas, methane, and coal). I am a strong proponent of the Coal industry as I worked as a Safety Supervisor for 3 of our local coal mines (Caballo, North Antelope Rochelle, and Eagle Butte/Belle Ayr). I know first hand what the leftist narratives do to affect the life we lead out here in Wyoming.

Arch Resources winding down massive US coal mine as customer base dwindles

Source: Alan J. Nash The owner of the second-largest coal mine in the U.S. by production volume is planning for the asset s closure as retirement dates approach for several plants that burn much of the mine s fuel. Coal demand in the U.S. has been declining for years, and Arch Resources Inc. announced Feb. 9 that it would be winding down its thermal coal operations, including those at Black Thunder, a Wyoming mine that produced 12.7 million tons of coal in the fourth quarter of 2020. Black Thunder production represented about 9.7% of the coal mined in the country in that period, according to an S&P Global Market Intelligence analysis.

Closures, more volume declines hitting Powder River Basin coal region in US

Closures, more volume declines hitting Powder River Basin coal region in US
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