[–] BoiledCabbage 2y ago ↗ A really impressive visualization - and first time I've seen anything like it. I'm curious why it wasn't more popular. [–] neovialogistics 2y ago ↗ I've only ever seen something similar by the British Geological Society in 2015:https://www.bgs.ac.uk/discovering-geology/maps-and-resources...Both of these are fantastic visual aids for those with a moderate amount of geology knowledge. [–] cyanydeez 2y ago ↗ Often crossections are meant to be functional, eg, grabbing a ruler and measuring. As such, these seem more useful than actual. You'd still want a flat section if you're trying to estimate location and depth.
[–] neovialogistics 2y ago ↗ I've only ever seen something similar by the British Geological Society in 2015:https://www.bgs.ac.uk/discovering-geology/maps-and-resources...Both of these are fantastic visual aids for those with a moderate amount of geology knowledge.
[–] cyanydeez 2y ago ↗ Often crossections are meant to be functional, eg, grabbing a ruler and measuring. As such, these seem more useful than actual. You'd still want a flat section if you're trying to estimate location and depth.
[–] mayormcmatt 2y ago ↗ This is both trippy-looking and very informative at the same time. I love these!
4 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 9.1 ms ] threadhttps://www.bgs.ac.uk/discovering-geology/maps-and-resources...
Both of these are fantastic visual aids for those with a moderate amount of geology knowledge.