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Here's an image of North Korea at night that does not appear fake to me (top one.) It shows a few city lights, it shows a brightly lit DMZ, it shows lights in surrounding countries that appear to be dark in today's IOD above. This is was I expected North Korea to look like.
OK, I'll stop ranting and raving now. |
dammit people! i told you them n'rth k'reans had lights! we got to invade now. it's time to kill evry las' one o' them sonzabitches!
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Lookout, um...er...what are you doing today? You sound a little different. :vader1:
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oh, that was just my best reactionary, redneck,rascist, militia imitation. you don't like?
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If you're right and it is a fake, who's faking it and why? |
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From a link off glatt's link. I downloaded the 39.6MB tif, converted to a 4.54MB jpeg that's 227.556 inches x 113.778 inches.
Did a surgical strike on Korea for this image. :crazy: They look like islands offshore in this image? |
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The diagonal line is probably a seam between images from successive passes.
It looks to me like this image deliberately excludes everything outside of S. Korea, though. China should be lit, and Pyongyang as well. |
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N Korea has lights in P'yongynag and in other major cities such a Wonsan (where the USS Pueblo was taken after being captured) and Hungnam. Curiously, N Koreas North East poplulation centers don't seen to consume much electricity for lighting even though this is the region containing most of the nuclear related activities. |
You know, the time of night could make the difference. If it were 7 or 8 pm there would likely be more lights. If it were past midnight in a country with severe energy shortages and no night life, then, there may be too few to show up on a satellite. No light color doesn't mean no electricity, it could be very dim or unconcentrated electricity.
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IOW I don't understand your point. |
You know, maybe it was just cloudy over North Korea and parts of China that night.
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Careful Google research finds another two shots:
http://www.cotf.edu/ete/modules/korea/klights.html And most importantly http://agora.ex.nii.ac.jp/~kitamoto/...lights.html.en "Several images in the following illustrate several regions in Japan generated from the World Stable Lights dataset. The brighter the area is, the brighter the yellow color is, and the background of those images are generated from the Blue Marble dataset." http://cellar.org/2005/dmsp-japan.jpg |
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