Daily Overview

Daily Overview The daily post from Overview. Showing Earth from above to inspire the Overview Effect. That's the cognitive shift that we hope to inspire.
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Our project was inspired, and derives its name, from an idea known as the Overview Effect. This term refers to the sensation astronauts have when given the opportunity to look down and view the Earth as a whole. They have the chance to appreciate our home in its entirety, to reflect on its beauty and its fragility all at once. From our line of sight on the earth's surface, it’s impossible to fully

appreciate the beauty and intricacy of the things we’ve constructed, the sheer complexity of the systems we’ve developed, or the devastating impact that we’ve had on our planet. We believe that beholding these forces as they shape our Earth is necessary to make progress in understanding who we are as a species, and what is needed to sustain a safe and healthy planet. As a result, the Overviews (what we call these images) focus on the the places and moments where human activity—for better or for worse—has shaped the landscape. Each Overview starts with a thought experiment. We consider the places where man has left his mark on the planet and then conduct the necessary research to identify locations (and the corresponding geo-coordinates) to convey that idea. The mesmerizing flatness seen from this vantage point, the surprising comfort of systematic organization on a massive scale, or the vibrant colors that we capture will hopefully turn your head. However, once we have that attention, we hope you will go beyond the aesthetics, contemplate just exactly what it is that you're seeing, and consider what that means for our planet.

The 2026 NBA Finals tip off tomorrow, with the New York Knicks and San Antonio Spurs facing off for the championship. Se...
02/06/2026

The 2026 NBA Finals tip off tomorrow, with the New York Knicks and San Antonio Spurs facing off for the championship. Seen here are aerial views of Madison Square Garden in Manhattan and Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, the two arenas at the center of this year’s matchup.

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On this day in 1932, the Afsluitdijk was completed in the Netherlands. The 32-kilometer d**e and causeway separates the ...
28/05/2026

On this day in 1932, the Afsluitdijk was completed in the Netherlands. The 32-kilometer d**e and causeway separates the Wadden Sea from the IJsselmeer, sealing off the former Zuiderzee, a saltwater inlet of the North Sea, and gradually transforming it into a freshwater lake. In this Overview, an airplane and its contrail cut across the water beside a small section of the d**e, while the turbines of Windpark Fryslân rise from the IJsselmeer nearby. Made up of 89 turbines, the wind farm is one of the world’s largest built in inland water, adding a modern layer of Dutch engineering to a landscape long defined by the country’s effort to live with the sea.

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Today marks 89 years since the Golden Gate Bridge first opened to pedestrians on May 27, 1937. Fifty years later, an est...
27/05/2026

Today marks 89 years since the Golden Gate Bridge first opened to pedestrians on May 27, 1937. Fifty years later, an estimated 300,000 people crowded onto the span for Bridgewalk ’87. Held on May 24, 1987, the celebration drew far more people than expected, packing the roadway so tightly that the bridge’s normally arched deck visibly flattened and reportedly sagged by as much as seven feet under the weight of the crowd. Engineers later said the bridge was not in danger, but the scene remains unforgettable: a day when one of the world’s most iconic bridges appeared to bend beneath the weight of the city celebrating it.

Image #5 via SF Chronicle / Deanne Fitzmaurice

Christ the Redeemer, seen from a low-angle satellite perspective above Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.Completed in 1931 after ne...
12/05/2026

Christ the Redeemer, seen from a low-angle satellite perspective above Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Completed in 1931 after nearly a decade of construction, the statue stands 98 feet tall, or 125 feet including its pedestal, with arms stretching 92 feet across the summit of Mount Corcovado. Built from reinforced concrete and covered in millions of small soapstone tiles, the 635-metric-ton (1.4-million-pound) monument had to be assembled more than 2,300 feet above the city, with materials carried up the mountain by rail.

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