If the BP Oil Spill Moved into Your Neighborhood
BY Nancy Scola | Wednesday, June 9 2010
Are you ready to just get sick to your stomach? IfItWasMyHome.com lets you overlay the scale and scope of the BP oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico on top of anywhere on the planet.
The BP oil spill compared to New York City.The bright side, if there can be said to be one here, is that the queasiness that these visualizations generate is a product of two resources made pointedly open and public by their creators. The first was made by private industry: Google Maps. The second is the data set being regularly updated and pushed public by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, better known as NOAA, which is part of the U.S. Department of Commerce. It can be difficult to wrap ones mind around just how big a mess we're talking about here. But the tool and data, taken together, manage to personalize the oil expanse's enormous, hideous footprint.
The site, built by a developer by the name of Andy Lintner, comes to us via Foreign Policy's Joshua Keating, who notes, "[If] it wasn't also awful and terrifying it would be a pretty fun game."
After the jump, the size of the BP oil slick as compared to the city of Chicago, the state of Hawaii, and the city of Rwanda.
The BP oil spill compared to the city of Chicago.
The BP oil spill compared to the state of Hawaii.
The BP oil spill compared to the country of Rwanda.