Development of a Carbon Sequestration Visualization Tool using
Google Earth Pro
Abstract
The Big Sky Carbon Sequestration Partnership seeks to prepare organizations throughout the western United States for a possible carbon-constrained economy. Through the development of CO2 capture and subsurface sequestration technology, the Partnership is working to enable the region to cleanly utilize its abundant fossil energy resources. The intent of the Los Alamos National Laboratory Big Sky Visualization tool is to allow geochemists, geologists, geophysicists, project managers, and other project members to view, identify, and query the data collected from CO2 injection tests using a single data source platform, a mission to which Google Earth Pro is uniquely and ideally suited . The visualization framework enables fusion of data from disparate sources and allows investigators to fully explore spatial and temporal trends in CO2 fate and transport within a reservoir. 3-D subsurface wells are projected above ground in Google Earth as the KML anchor points for the presentation of various surface subsurface data. This solution is the most integrative and cost-effective possible for the variety of users in the Big Sky community.
Authors
Gordon N Keating
Los Alamos National Laboratory, EES-9 Environmental Geology and Spatial Analysis MS D452, Los Alamos, NM 87545, United States
Mary K Greene (presenter)
Los Alamos National Laboratory, EES-9 Environmental Geology and Spatial Analysis MS D452, Los Alamos, NM 87545, United States
Themes
KML Science: Geology
Google Earth Pro
Links
Big Sky Carbon Sequestration Partnership
http://www.bigskyco2.org/home







