New Amazing Antarctica Discovery
Human beings have a set visual frequency range… meaning they are able to view things only within that range. But what if you could alter that range? What if you could ‘tune it in’ a wider range? You can. Anyone can by simply applying minimal contrast to change the tone or frequency of that image, and adjusting the light. SEE what you’re missing.
Using an image of Antarctica obtained from Google Earth, this is what it looks like under the ice cap of Antarctica.
AMAZING Antarctica Discovery
http://youtu.be/F8fvnQIYfIU
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I’m a media designer by profession. All you’re doing is screwing around with color saturations in Photoshop, babe. You cannot tune the “frequency” of an image that way. Such operations can only be done when the image possesses higher fields of data and Google Earth is a very pixelated and low quality RGB image. The squares you see forming are nothing more than the individual components of the larger image. Satellites photograph the earth in segments…then software is used to paste the segments together…that’s why sometimes on Google Earth you will see rectangular imagery that is brighter or darker than surrounding images. Not all images can be reproduced to the same exact level of quality each time. We’re talking hundreds of thousands of images of the planet being sewn together to form visual manifest of the surface. If you diddle with hues, gamma, and brightness, all you’re doing is revealing some of the more subtle quirks between all those individual images. All in all, you just don’t know what the hell you’re doing or talking about.