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.
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
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.
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 spglobal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from spglobal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.