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Google 'Street View' soars to lofty heights

March 2, 2015

Search engine Google is giving users a bird's eye-view from the top of the Amazon rainforest in South America, with the release of its latest "Street View" addition.

https://p.dw.com/p/1Ejco
Google Aufnahmen vom Amazon Regenwald mit dem Trekker
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/Google

The photographs released on Monday are the newest addition to Google’s widespread digital maps service, Street View.

Users will be able to travel the upper canopy and the forest floor of the Amazon rainforest, one of the world's most diverse ecosystems. The pictures give a virtual trip of some of the Amazon's largest tributaries, and an insight into how up to 17 local communities live along the river and in the forest.

Google says the imagery is the culmination of 500 kilometers (310 miles) of boat travel along the Amazon, and at least 20 kilometers by foot through tough terrain.

Screenshot Google Earth Streetview Juma Reservat
A virtual trip down Brazil's Rio Mariepaua river on Google's new 'Street View'Image: www.google.com

Teaming up with environmental protection group Amazonas Sustainable Foundation, Google was able to explore an isolated part of the Amazon with a device called a Trekker. The technology allowed a camera on a zip line to pass through the treetops.

Up until now, "Street View" offered users panoramic views of cities and neighborhoods photographed by car-mounted cameras.

jlw/jr (AP, Google)