วันอังคารที่ 19 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2556

North Korea's Not-So-Secret Nuclear Test Site, as Seen on Google Maps


North Korea appeared on Tuesday to have followed through on its long-promised plan of conducting its third nuclear test, detonating what state media called a "smaller and light" nuclear device in a sealed tunnel that was carved horizontally into a remote North Korea mountain. The incident has much of the international community on edge, and quickly drew a sharp rebuke from President Obama, who called it "a threat to U.S. national security and to international peace and security."
While the blast served as something of a warning shot to the world at large, it also represents a signal flare from the reclusive nation's nuclear test site for amateur Internet sleuths. The blast set off a brief seismic wave, which provided the U.S. Geological Survey the chance to more or less pinpoint the exact location of where the it occurred: 41.301°N, 129.066°E. Type those coordinates into Google Maps and do a little scrolling, and you'll discover both an aptly titled "Nuclear Test Road" and, eventually, a handful of gray buildings labeled "Nuclear Test Facility."
Those labels, as you may remember, are a new feature to Google's map of the reclusive nation that were added late last month with the help of its "citizen cartographers" via an interface known as Google Map Maker. As the Washington Post explained then, the Wikipedia-like program allowed users to submit their own data, which was then fact-checked by other users. Before North Korea was almost entirely unlabeled; now it includes designations for everything from city subway stops to city-sized gulags and, yes, apparently even semi-secret nuclear test sites.
While the test site in question appears to have been labeled even before today's blast, the USGS coordinates clearly serve as another in a string of data points for those cartographers looking for confirmation. The satellite images, and accompanying labels, are also pretty interesting to look at.
The blast site, as pinpointed by the USGS:
1360681532016
Nuclear Test Road leading into a mountain:
1360681558273
And a close-up of what certainly now appears to be a nuclear test site, at 41.278047°N,129.087372°E:
1360681617562
***Follow @JoshVoorhees and the rest of the @slatest team on Twitter.***


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Cr :  สุวิทย์ กิ่งตัน 

North Korea's Not-So-Secret Nuclear Test Site, as Seen on Google Maps

Ref :  

:Sylvain Pastor
Google just released a detailed map of North Korea in +Google Maps.

Ramswaroop Singh Thakur
It's too bad people in North Korea don't have the internet. They could use it to rate their favourite Gulag.
Google unveils detailed North Korea map, with gulags »


:The Guardian
Google is slowly filling in the blanks in its quest to build a comprehensive map of North Korea – one of the world's most secretive states – with the addition of new details, including one of the country's notorious gulags.

The new map of the secretive state includes positions of roads, parks, monuments to the Kim dynasty and labour camps.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2013/jan/29/google-detail-north-korea-map?CMP=SOCNETTXT8763I

Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

:สุวิทย์ กิ่งตัน 
North Korea's Not-So-Secret Nuclear Test Site, as Seen on Google Maps
กูเกิ้ลเปิดเผยความลับฐานอาวุธนิวเคลียของเกาหลีเหนือ ไม่ปิดแผนที่เหมือนแต่ก่อน จะทะเลาะกับเขาไหมเนี่ย

North Korea's Not-So-Secret Nuclear Test Site, as Seen on Google Maps
กูเกิ้ลเปิดเผยความลับฐานอาวุธนิวเคลียของเกาหลีเหนือ ไม่ปิดแผนที่เหมือนแต่ก่อน จะทะเลาะกับเขาไหมเนี่ย

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