Reference no: EM133434690
Step 1- Create a Project On GOOGLE EARTH
Click on the Projects icon in the left-hand navigation pane. A table of contents menu will appear. You will click the Create button to create a new project. Next, provide a title for your project and include your last name at the end. All of your edits are automatically saved in Google Drive as you work. Once you create save the name of your project click on "Watch tutorial" to get a refresher on how to create tours .
Step 2- Select Points of interest
Explore the placemarks on Slides 11-15, and select your favorite glacier. Investigate the area around your chosen glacier and try to spot glacial landforms. You must find three erosional and three depositional glacial landforms. Create place marks for all of them. When you have found suitable locations for your tour, play around with the zoom and tilting to get the best view possible for your landforms. Save that perfect view by clicking .
Step 3- Create your own explanation
Next, you will need to describe the location, landforms, features, glacial processes, etc. In your project's table of contents menu, find the placemark that you want to edit. Click the edit button. Place your descriptions in the empty text box, below the title. Give names and descriptions to all of the placemarks that you have created. You have to write your own content; you cannot simply copy paste text from a website. Use best citation practices. No credit will be given for not following these instructions.
Step 4- Add a Photo
Add an image to enhance your placemark. Find a picture of the landform. It does not have to be in the same location as your placemark, but it has to show the same, or a related, concept. Right-click on the image and copy the URL address of the image ("Copy image address"), or you can save the image directly onto your computer. Go back to your placemark (in edit mode) and click on the empty photo gallery box at the top (above the title). A white upload screen will appear with several upload options. Attach your image, either by pasting the image URL address or drag-and-drop the image file. Note: image link address files that end in "jpg," "gif," or "png," will work best. If the photo is not working, make sure you picked one with a link ending in one of these.
Step 5- Final Touches
Click the button and make sure that everything displays as you would like it. Once you are done, click the "Share" button. If you see that the link is restricted, click "Change to anyone with the link." Once made public, you should see a green globe with "Anyone on the internet with this link can view." Click "copy link" and paste that link into the submission box in your lab.