Seas spread a large portion of the Earth, including its longest mountain run and the antiquated scaffolds that people crossed to arrive at different landmasses. In an ongoing redo of a 2008 NASA video, planetary researcher James O’Donoghue shows what it would resemble if all that water depleted away, uncovering the shrouded three-fifths of Earth’s surface.
O’Donoghue works at the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and was earlier at NASA. For the video, he took a movement that NASA physicist and artist Horace Mitchell made in 2008 and gave it a couple of increments. He altered the planning and added a tracker to show how much water depletes all through the liveliness.