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Featured Articles

June, 2008
Global Heritage Fund Executive Director, Jeff Morgan,
Carries Olympic Torch for World Heritage and
International Cooperation

January, 2008
GHF Mirador Featured in International Press

December, 2007
GHF Pingyao Featured in Architectural Digest

October, 2007
GHF Cyrene Featured in The New York Times

September, 2007
GHF Cyrene Featured in Daily Telegraph. Quote from Stefaan Poortman, Manager, International Development

December, 2006
Protecting Precious Places

December, 2006
GHF Mirador Featured in National Geographic

January, 2006
Architecture: Monumental Task: Funding the Race Against Time

January, 2006
Preservation: Sure, It's a Good Thing, but..

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May, 2008
Tourism circuit of harappan sites of Gujarat

May, 2008
GHF Mirador in the Press

May, 2008
Saving One Heritage Site at a Time

March, 2008
Awesome Ancient Sites
Ruins not yet ruined by too many tourists

January, 2008
GHF Hampi Featured in The Times of India

November, 2007
Prince Charles visits Ancient Site in Anatolia to Commemorate new Site Museum and Visitors Center

Fall 2007
Saving the Mirador Basin. GHF featured in American Archaeology Magazine

July, 2007
Global Heritage Google Earth Outreach Launch

June, 2007
Site-seeing: Reports from the Field: Along the Nakbe Trail

April, 2007
Fire Alerts Go Global

February, 2007
GHF Mirador: Digging for the Truth "New Maya Revelations" to air on History Channel

January 7, 2007
Destination: Guatemala
Atop the world of the Maya

December 31, 2006
The mystery of Maya's jungle heart

December 15, 2006
GHF Mirador Featured in Daily Mail

Nov, Dec 2006
The Mission for Mirador: Ecoconservationists are working to save Guatemala's wilderness, wildlife, and ruins

September 12, 2006
The United States Department of the Interior and the Government of Guatemala Sign Memorandum of Understanding to Protect Major Maya Archaeological Sites at El Mirador

August, 2006
A Home for the Indus - GHF's support of Indus Valley research, excavations and museums in Gujarat

August 18, 2006
Iraq's ancient gem - GHF mentioned in Arizona Daily Star article

July 4, 2006
Group guarding world's heritage

June 30, 2006
Indus Heritage Center Explores Ancient India Roots

June 17, 2006
Haunted By History - The ruins of a contested capital are still hostage to geopolitics

June, 17, 2006
The Ties That Divide - KARS: Locals dream of reopening the frontier between Turkey and Armenia

May, 2006
On Ancient Walls, a New Maya Epoch

March, 2006
Scanning Our Heritage. Laser Scanning For Cultural Heritage Applications. US Berkeley team scanning GHF Project, Chavín de Huántar

February 25, 2006
GHF Chavin de Huantar Featured on History Channel's 'Digging for the Truth'

February 10, 2006
Into The Wild - Searching The Jungle For Buried Mayan Treasure In Guatemala

January 25, 2006
$10m Museum to Re-Visit an Ancient Civilisation

January 17, 2006
Flip side of World Heritage status

December 24, 2005
GHF and Jindal Group to rebuild Hampi

December 20, 2005
GHF Founding Investor Bill Draper Featured in San Francisco Chronicle
Draper Fellowship Awarded to Global Heritage Fund in 2003

December 10, 2005
Running after fabulous ruins - Global Heritage Fund featured in The Hindu for work in Hampi UNESCO World Heritage site, Karnataka, India

November 25, 2005
GHF's Conservation in Shanxi Province Featured in Wall Street Journal - 'History's Last Salvation'

November, 2005
Global Heritage Fund Kars Heritage Program Featured on CNN Turkey

November 12, 2005
In Guatemala, A Battle Over Logs And a Lost Kingdom. Mr. Hansen Aims to Preserve Vast Mayan Ruin as Park; Skeptical, Villagers Fight

October 5 2005
Jeff Morgan's global approach to preservation could bring tourism, stability to postwar Iraq. Cornell University Chronicle Online article

October 2005
Return to Cyrene. GHF Funding Assists GIS Mapping of Cyrene

August 24, 2005
Kars wants to reopen its border on the Caucases

May 2005
Saving Our Global Heritage. GHF's CEO, Jeff Morgan, Featured in Gentry Magazine. (1.57 PDF)

April 28, 2005
Repairing Lost Monuments in Vietnam. GHF featured on ABC Vietnam special
.

March 31, 2005
El Mirador Nominated as World Heritage Site. ElPeriodico article

March 31, 2005
El Mirador to be declared cultural heritage. Siglo article

April 18, 2005
Layers of clustered apartments hide artifacts of ancient urban life City on Turkish plains a major draw for 'goddess tours'

April, 2005
Set in Stone. Can Jeff Morgan save the world through enlightened tourism? (766k PDF)

April, 2005
Before It's Ruined: Northern Vietnam. You can lose the crowds at stunning My Son Sanctuary and Bach Ma National Park. (461k PDF)

March 30, 2005
Come and See. An increasing number of US and UK charities are organising donor field trips, which appeal to wealthy donors who want to see their cash in action rather than go to expensive fundraising diners. GHF featured in Third Sector article. (379k PDF)

Feb 11, 2005
How much difference does UNESCO make?

Jan/Feb 2005
Stone Temple Secrets. What happened in the underground labyrinth of ancient Peru? Archaeologist John Rick gets to the bottom of a 3,000-year-old mystery.

Oct 20 , 2004
From Ancient Ruins To Tourist Destinations

2005
Local man fights to protect cultural sites

"Saving Our Global Heritage" - the book
"Saving Our Global Heritage" - the book
 
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Global Heritage Google Earth Outreach Launch


Google Earth Outreach

Press Coverage - Week of June 26, 2007

San Francisco Chronicle

Associated Press
AP – June 26, 2007 - Global Heritage Fund Executive Director Jeff Morgan, right, discusses the environmental situation in Mirador, Guatemala, with Daniel Juhn, of Conservation International during the rollout of Google Earth Outreach, a new program designed to help nonprofit organizations advocate for and illustrate their work during the tool's rollout news conference at Google Earth's offices in New York, Tuesday, June 26, 2007. Using Google Earth's high-resolution imagery, satellite mapping and 3D geospatial database, Global Heritage Fund unveiled a 'Save Our Global Heritage' campaign with Google Earth's mapping initiative to help save the world's most ancient and endangered cultural heritage sites in the world's most impoverished countries. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

Google to help non-profits raise money with mapping software

By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer
Tuesday, June 26, 2007

New York (AP) -- Google Inc. launched an initiative Tuesday to help charities and other non-profit groups use maps and satellite images to raise awareness, recruit volunteers and encourage donations. The Google Earth Outreach program represents a formalization of ad-hoc partnerships with organizations using the free software to publicize their works.

Already, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum has been using Google Earth to call attention to atrocities in the Darfur region of Sudan. When users scan over Darfur, they see icons of flames representing destroyed villages and of tents for refugee camps. Clicking on one opens a window with details and links on how to help.

The U.N. Environmental Program, meanwhile, has used the software to show areas of environmental destruction. The Jane Goodall Institute shows locations of its research on chimpanzees and African deforestation. A Brazilian Indian tribe is working on ways to help stop loggers and miners from deforesting the jungle and digging for gold.

"There's nothing like the power of information to make people understand the urgency of action," said Kathy Bushkin Calvin, executive vice president for the U.N. Foundation.
Edward Wilson, chief executive of Earthwatch Institute, said the maps help people understand that "what they are reading is not happening some place out of sight, out of mind. Those places become places you can visit, you can actually see."

The launch party at Google's New York office, chosen for its proximity to leading philanthropic groups, came complete with beach balls sporting globe designs. Video monitors showed Google Earth's software in action. By turning these individual efforts into a formal program, the Mountain View, Calif.-based search company hopes to make its tools more widely available to non-profits around the world. The resources will be available on an open Web site, so technically individuals and corporations can tap into the program as well. However, one component of the initiative — grants to receive a free copy of Google Earth's $400 professional-version software — will be limited initially to certain U.S. non-profits certified by the Internal Revenue Service. Many of the features, though, are available in the free version of Google Earth, available as a download for Windows, Mac and Linux computers.

Non-profits are "trying to tell a story and trying to move people emotionally," said Rebecca Moore, manager of Google Earth Outreach. "They are trying to inspire action, advocate on behalf of a cause and drive people to, for example, make donations, sign a petition or lobby your congressional representative.  "They have somewhat unique needs. Therefore we have focused on helping them understand how to do these things."

Many government agencies, hobbyists and other users of Google Earth already overlay maps with photos, video, text and links pinned onto specific locations. "KML" files containing such overlays are distributed through Web sites, e-mail or the software itself. Once a user clicks on the file, icons representing those elements appear on the map.  Google will be providing online guides, video tutorials and case studies aimed at showing non-profit representatives how they, too, can use Google Earth's overlays. Although Google also runs a mapping Web site, users will need the free Google Earth software to view the materials. Google says it has 200 million Google Earth users worldwide.
 
Associated Press
AP – June 26, 2007 - Using a new computer tool designed for non-profits by Google Earth Outreach, Daniel Juhn, Director of Conservation International's Regional Analysis Program, left, discusses conservation in Mirador, Guatemala, with Global Heritage Fund's Executive Director Jeff Morgan following the rollout of Google Earth Outreach at Google Earth's offices in New York, Tuesday, June 26, 2007. The program is designed to help nonprofit organizations use Google Earth to illustrate and advocate for their work. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

Global Heritage Network and Google

Google Earth Outreach Showcase
http://www.google.com/earth/outreach/showcase.html

Global Heritage Fund Google Earth Launch Page
http://www.globalheritagefund.org/globalheritagenetwork.html

Google Earth Gallery: Explore Popular Places
http://earth.google.com/gallery/

Earth Outreach Showcase: Education & Culture
http://www.google.com/earth/outreach/edu_culture.html

Google Press Release
June 26, 2007 11:00 AM Eastern Daylight Time

Introducing Google Earth Outreach

New initiative helps nonprofit organizations around the world leverage the power of Google Earth to advocate, educate; new Global Awareness layers from Global Heritage Fund, Earthwatch Institute, TransFair USA
Google

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) today announced the launch of Google Earth Outreach, a new program designed to help nonprofit organizations around the world leverage the power of Google Earth to illustrate and advocate for the important work that they do.

The announcement was made at Google’s New York City office by Elliot Schrage, Google Vice President for Global Communications & Public Affairs, and John Hanke, Director of Google Earth & Maps. Pilot Outreach partners including Jane Goodall, Founder, the Jane Goodall Institute; Kathy Bushkin Calvin, Executive Vice President, United Nations Foundation; and Edward Wilson, President and CEO, Earthwatch, were also on hand to discuss how their organizations are using Google Earth to tell effective and compelling stories about their work.

Google Earth Outreach enables any organization to quickly and easily get the resources it needs to create compelling stories through Google Earth layers. The program includes comprehensive online guides, video tutorials, and case studies about using Google Earth specifically targeted to the needs of nonprofit organizations. In addition, there are online forums connecting new participants to Global Awareness partners and experienced programmers who can assist in developing Keyhole Markup Language (KML) layers for Google Earth. These forums, actively moderated by Google Earth Outreach staff, serve to foster discussion and cooperation among organizations and the broader Google Earth community.

Organizations can also now apply online for Google Earth Pro grants (a $400 value); grantees will receive additional technical support from Google. Participating organizations may be highlighted in the Google Earth Outreach Showcase, an online gallery of the most compelling new layers, and a subset of those will be featured in the Global Awareness folder in Google Earth on a rotating basis. More details about Google Earth Outreach are available at http://earth.google.com/outreach.

"Google's mission is all about making information more accessible and useful," said Elliot Schrage, Google Vice President of Global Communications & Public Affairs. "With programs like Google Earth Outreach, we seek to help create a 'marketplace of ideas' in the growing not-for-profit sector that rivals and complements what we offer commercial enterprises. In a very practical way, Google Earth Outreach demonstrates that technology can inspire action by bringing seemingly distant problems closer to home."

“Our goal with Google Earth Outreach is to help public service organizations worldwide leverage our mapping technology to further their goals by providing tailored technical guidance and grants,” said John Hanke, Director of Google Earth & Maps. “Now any organization can quickly and easily annotate Google Earth with pictures, video and information to tell visual, compelling stories of the work they do to over 200 million Google Earth users.”

"Only if we understand can we care. Only if we care will we help. With Google Earth Outreach, more people have the chance to see, to care, and then to act,” said Jane Goodall, PhD, DBE Founder, the Jane Goodall Institute, UN Messenger of Peace.

"Google Earth represents a whole new way for us to connect with the world," explains Ed Wilson, President and CEO at Earthwatch. "Not only can we inform people about key environmental issues facing the world today, but we can give them the opportunity to get directly involved. From our NGO and corporate partners to our dedicated researchers and volunteers, Google Earth provides us all with a centralized tool to communicate our mission--and maximize our impact."

 As part of the announcement John Hanke also introduced three new Global Awareness layers for Google Earth:

•   Global Heritage Fund (GHF) - The GHF Global Awareness layer explores cultural heritage sites around the world that GHF is working to preserve for future generations. From ancient Mayan Mirador pyramids buried in Guatemalan forests threatened by clear cutting to the crumbling Lijiang Ancient Town in China, GHF takes users to these endangered archaeological treasures of human civilization and details the efforts to save them in partnership with local governments and resources.

•   Earthwatch Expeditions – The Earthwatch Global Awareness layer enables users to virtually visit more than 100 volunteer Earthwatch expeditions in Google Earth— from recording the activities of lemurs in Madagascar to determining the impact of climate change on grey whale populations in Mexico and Canada. Enthusiasts and would-be volunteers can explore scientific field research projects in progress around the world and learn how they can help collect field data in the areas of rainforest ecology, wildlife conservation, marine science, archaeology, and more.

•   Fair Trade Certified - The TransFair USA layer introduces users to the over 70 Fair Trade Co-ops located throughout Latin America, Asia and Africa. Fair trade is an innovative market-based approach to sustainable development that helps family farmers in developing countries gain direct access to markets and develop the business capacity necessary to compete in the global marketplace.

About Google Earth

Google Earth combines satellite imagery, maps and the power of Google’s search service to make the world's geographic information easily accessible and useful. There have been over 200 million unique downloads of Google Earth since the product's launch in June, 2005. Google Earth can be downloaded for free at http://earth.google.com/.

Using a new computer tool designed for non-profits by Google Earth Outreach, Daniel Juhn, Director of Conservation International's Regional Analysis Program, left, discusses conservation in Mirador, Guatemala, with Global Heritage Fund's Executive Director Jeff Morgan. (Kathy Willens/The Associated Press)

 

Google Earth maps aiding non-profits

Google lends satellite-map application to further nonprofits, charities' causes
USA Today

By Anick Jesdanun Associated Press

NEW YORK — Google launched an initiative Tuesday to help charities and other non-profit groups use maps and satellite images to raise awareness, recruit volunteers and encourage donations.

The  Google Earth Outreach program represents a formalization of ad-hoc partnerships with organizations using the free software to publicize their works.

Already, the  U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum has been using Google Earth to call attention to atrocities in the Darfur region of Sudan. When users scan over Darfur, they see icons of flames representing destroyed villages and of tents for refugee camps. Clicking on one opens a window with details and links on how to help.

The  U.N. Environmental Program, meanwhile, has used the software to show areas of environmental destruction. The  Jane Goodall Institute shows locations of its research on chimpanzees and African deforestation. A  Brazilian Indian tribe is working on ways to help stop loggers and miners from deforesting the jungle and digging for gold.

By turning these individual efforts into a formal program, Google hopes to make its tools more widely available to non-profits around the world. The resources will be available on an open website, so technically individuals and corporations can tap into the program as well.

However, grants to receive a free copy of Google Earth's $400 professional-version software will be limited initially to certain U.S. non-profits certified by the Internal Revenue Service. Many of the features, though, are available in the free version of Google Earth, available as a download for Windows, Mac and Linux computers.

Non-profits are "trying to tell a story and trying to move people emotionally," said Rebecca Moore, manager of Google Earth Outreach. "They are trying to inspire action, advocate on behalf of a cause and drive people to, for example, make donations, sign a petition or lobby your congressional representative.

"They have somewhat unique needs. Therefore we have focused on helping them understand how to do these things."

Many government agencies, hobbyists and other users of Google Earth already overlay maps with photos, video, text and links pinned onto specific locations.

"KML" files containing such overlays are distributed through websites, e-mail or the software itself. Once a user clicks on the file, icons representing those elements appear on the map.

Google will be providing online guides, video tutorials and case studies aimed at showing non-profit representatives how they, too, can use Google Earth's overlays.

Although Google also runs a mapping website, users will need the free Google Earth software to view the materials. Google says it has 200 million Google Earth users worldwide.

Google Helps Nonprofits Conquer Google Earth

The project also includes online forums to enhance communications and connect interested users of Google Earth with experienced developers.
Information Week

Thomas Claburn. Information Week
June 27, 2007

Google on Tuesday launched a new initiative to help nonprofit organizations communicate and present data using Google Earth.

Google Earth Outreach aims to provide information including help documents, video tutorials, and case studies that describe how to create Keyhole Markup Language (KML) layers for Google Earth. The project also includes online forums to enhance communications between nonprofit organizations and to put interested users of Google Earth in touch with experienced developers.

Examples of how nonprofit organizations can use geospatial data to communicate can be seen in the new layers, assembled by the Global Heritage Fund, EarthWatch, and TransFair USA, that Google added to Google Earth's Global Awareness folder.

In April, Google added a layer detailing the Darfur crisis to the Global Awareness folder, along with several other layers. The Darfur layer remains the only one turned on by default.

Other layers in that folder -- the United Nations Environment Programme Atlas of Our Changing Environment, the World Wildlife Fund's Conservation Projects, Appalachian Mountaintop Removal, and Jane Goodall's Gombe Chimpanzee Blog -- must be manually selected before they're visible on Google Earth.

Google also is offering nonprofits the opportunity to apply online for Google Earth Pro license grants. Google Earth Pro normally costs $400. Organizations awarded a free license also receive additional technical support and the opportunity to have their work featured in the Google Earth Outreach Showcase, an online gallery of new Google Earth layers.

"Google's mission is all about making information more accessible and useful," said Elliot Schrage, VP of global communications and public affairs, in a statement. "With programs like Google Earth Outreach, we seek to help create a 'marketplace of ideas' in the growing not-for-profit sector that rivals and complements what we offer commercial enterprises."

The power of satellite imagery hasn't escaped nonprofit organizations. Earlier this month at the International Digital Earth Symposium, Amnesty International USA introduced a project called Eyes on Darfur designed to monitor vulnerable villages in Sudan and to deter violence there.

Last week, Reuters reported that Air Force Lt. Gen. David Deptula, deputy chief of staff for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance, saw online mapping software like Google Earth as a potential security threat, but acknowledged the technology could not be undone.

Since Google Earth debuted in June, 2005, it has been downloaded more than 200 million times.

Google Earth & Maps Director, John Hanke

Google Earth & Maps Director John Hanke speaks from Google Earth's offices in New York, Tuesday, June 26, 2007, during the rollout of Google Earth Outreach, a new program designed to help nonprofit organizations use the computer search tool to illustrate and advocate for their work. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

 
John Hanke speaks with Jane Goodall

Google Earth & Maps Director John Hanke smiles as he speaks with Jane Goodall from London via video teleconference from Google Earth's offices in New York, Tuesday, June 26, 2007, during the rollout of Google Earth Outreach, a new program designed to help nonprofit organizations use the computer search tool to illustrate and advocate for their work. Goodall is the founder of the Jame Goodall Institute. She has partnered with Google Earth Outreach to help get the program started.
(AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

 

Google Earth announces formal nonprofit initiative

The project also includes online forums to enhance communications and connect interested users of Google Earth with experienced developers.
c|net News.com

By Caroline McCarthy
June 26, 2007

At an event in Google's New York offices on Tuesday, the company unveiled a new initiative to make its Google Earth geography software a more accessible tool for nonprofit organizations.

"We're now officially launching a program called Google Earth Outreach," said John Hanke, director of Google Earth and Maps. "Google is stepping up and validating this as a bona fide program that will be staffed in our group."

Google Earth Outreach is now live, and several downloadable layers from the program's inaugural partners--the Global Heritage Fund, Earthwatch and Fair Trade Certified--are now available online.

The new Outreach program came about, according to Google executives, because the company saw the diverse range of ways that the software was being used. "We just completely didn't see the majority of uses for Google Earth," Hanke said. "I think it's blown away everybody on the team."

Nonprofit uses, particularly those pertaining to environmental and humanitarian causes, have proven to be one of the most prolific uses for the software. "We think that the technologies we're developing can be an important catalyst for education, for sharing information, for advocacy, to address global and local issues that affect everyone around the world," said Elliot Schrage, Google's vice president of global communications and public affairs.

Organizations can now apply for grants for the Google Earth Pro program, which normally costs $400 per person per year, as well as technical support for its Keyhole Markup Language, which Hanke described as "the HTML of marking up the Earth. It's pretty easy to use," he added, "but it's a new thing, so it needs to be explained."

The wildly popular, information-heavy Google Earth software has not been without critics who have suggested that perhaps it's unwise to make so much detailed mapping data freely available over the Internet.

In response, Google has repeatedly stressed that the benefits of the Google Earth software outweigh the drawbacks. Over the past year, different organizations have utilized the tool as a way to promote tourism, animate the spread of a hypothetical virus and highlight architectural marvels.

In April, Google formally partnered with the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum to create downloadable map layers to help visualize the humanitarian crisis in the Darfur region of Sudan.

It was the success of the Darfur layer, which Schrage described as "an incredibly vivid, powerful way of informing people what is going on in a faraway part of the world," that ultimately convinced the company to devote more Google Earth resources to the nonprofit initiative. "We believe that Google Earth can revolutionize the way people see the world around them," he added.

The announcement featured a videoconference appearance by legendary activist and humanitarian Jane Goodall, whose Jane Goodall Institute has been using Google Earth as a tool for some time now.

"When I began in 1960, my tools consisted of a paper and a pencil," she said to the audience. "That's putting the Jane Goodall Institute into a whole new era, and it's a very, very exciting era...it's certainly helping us hugely with our conservation efforts." Thanks to Google Earth, the Jane Goodall Institute now has a "geoblog" that's "a soap opera for wild chimpanzees."

Hanke said near the end of the event that footage of the conference will later be uploaded to the Google-owned YouTube video-sharing platform.

Internet outreach

Google lends satellite-map application to further nonprofits, charities' causes
The Indianapolis Star

By Anick Jesdanun
Associated Press
July 1, 2007

New tool: Global Heritage Fund Executive Director Jeff Morgan (right) discusses the delicate environmental situation in the historic Mayan region of Mirador, Guatemala, during the rollout of Google Earth Outreach.
New tool: Global Heritage Fund Executive Director Jeff Morgan (right) discusses the delicate environmental situation in the historic Mayan region of Mirador, Guatemala, during the rollout of Google Earth Outreach. Kathy Willens / Associated Press
Google has launched an initiative to help charities and other nonprofit groups use maps and satellite images to raise awareness, recruit volunteers and encourage donations.
The Google Earth Outreach program represents a formalization of ad-hoc partnerships with organizations using the free software to publicize their works.
Already, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum has been using Google Earth to call attention to atrocities in the Darfur region of Sudan. When users scan over Darfur, they see icons of flames representing destroyed villages and of tents for refugee camps. Clicking on one opens a window with details and links on how to help.
The U.N. Environmental Program, meanwhile, has used the software to show areas of environmental destruction. The Jane Goodall Institute shows locations of its research on chimpanzees and African deforestation. A Brazilian Indian tribe is working on ways to help stop loggers and miners from deforesting the jungle and digging for gold.
"There's nothing like the power of information to make people understand the urgency of action," said Kathy Bushkin Calvin, executive vice president for the U.N. Foundation.
Edward Wilson, chief executive of Earthwatch Institute, said the maps help people understand that "what they are reading is not happening some place out of sight, out of mind. Those places become places you can visit, you can actually see."
The launch party last week was at Google's New York office, chosen for its proximity to leading philanthropic groups. Video monitors showed Google Earth's software in action.
By turning these individual efforts into a formal program, the Mountain View, Calif.-based search company hopes to make its tools more available to nonprofits around the world. The resources will be available on an open Web site, so technically individuals and corporations can tap into the program as well.
However, one component of the initiative -- grants to receive a free copy of Google Earth's $400 professional-version software -- will be limited initially to certain U.S. nonprofits certified by the Internal Revenue Service. Many of the features, though, are available in the free version of Google Earth, available as a download for Windows, Mac and Linux computers.
Nonprofits are "trying to tell a story and trying to move people emotionally," said Rebecca Moore, manager of Google Earth Outreach. "They are trying to inspire action, advocate on behalf of a cause and drive people to, for example, make donations, sign a petition or lobby your congressional representative."
Many government agencies, hobbyists and other users of Google Earth already overlay maps with photos, video, text and links pinned onto specific locations.
"KML" files containing such overlays are distributed through Web sites, e-mail or the software itself. Once a user clicks on the file, icons representing those elements appear on the map.
Google will be providing online guides, video tutorials and case studies aimed at showing nonprofit representatives how they, too, can use Google Earth's overlays.
Although Google also runs a mapping Web site, users will need the free Google Earth software to view the materials.
Google says it has 200 million Google Earth users worldwide.

Google to help non-profits raise awareness, money, volunteers with mapping software

By Associated Press
Tuesday, June 26, 2007 - Updated: 06:53 AM EST

Also Featured in:

Also featured in:

New York Launch Event – Google Earth Outreach
Global Heritage Fund (GHF)

Photos by Josie Thompson, Manager, Global Heritage Network

Above: Josie Thompson, Manager, GHN of Global Heritage presents Global Heritage Leader in Conservation Award to Rebecca Moore and Jenifer Austin of Google Earth, for their unprecedented support of the Global Heritage Google Earth Outreach Launch and Global Awareness layers.
 
Above and below: Google Earth Team together in New York for Outreach Launch.
 

Press Contact: Jeff Morgan
+1.650.814.2045
jmorgan@globalheritagefund.org

GLOBAL HERITAGE LAUNCHES GOOGLE EARTH INITIATIVE TO SAVE ENDANGERED WORLD HERITAGE

Global Heritage Network (GHN) Enables Online Monitoring of Threatened Sites and Collaboration  by International Conservation Experts, Governments and Local Communities

New York, NY — (June 26, 2007) Global Heritage Fund (GHF) unveils a Google Earth mapping initiative to help save the world’s most ancient and endangered cultural heritage sites in the most impoverished countries.

As part of GHF’s ‘Saving Our Global Heritage’ campaign, Global Heritage Network (GHN) convenes online the world’s leading experts in heritage conservation, international development and sustainable tourism to plan sound solutions to save endangered global heritage sites in impoverished and war-torn regions.  With high-resolution imagery, Google Earth’s advanced satellite mapping and 3D geospatial database, the GHN layer for Google Earth enables site conservation plans, threats and mapping data to be shared in real time online, facilitating collaboration, conservation, advocacy and participation from hundreds of experts, government ministries, local citizens and communities around the world to work together and help save global heritage sites.

Every year, we are losing many of our last remaining global heritage sites in developing regions throughout Asia, the Middle East, Central Europe and the Americas. Unprecedented looting, encroachment, unchecked sprawl, neglect and deliberate destruction of major archaeological sites and ancient townscapes are overwhelming resource-poor national governments and local communities. 

 “Global Heritage Network is enabling the world community to actively help reverse the loss of some of our most important global heritage sites,” says Jeff Morgan, Executive Director of Global Heritage Fund. “Google’s advanced collaboration and mapping technologies make it possible for a non-profit like Global Heritage to have a global impact, without major investments in technology, hardware and software. In the coming decades, this will greatly benefit not only conservation, but the economic welfare of the local communities around these sites.”

Global Heritage Network (GHN) in Action
Global Heritage Network (GHN) integrates Google Earth™, Google SketchUp™, Google Scholar™, Google Groups™, Picasa™ and YouTube™ into its online initiative to support conservation and sustainable development.  More than 200 million Google Earth™ users worldwide can visualize and better understand the destruction of our global heritage currently unfolding, especially in developing countries.

  1. IRAQ - GHF’s Iraq Heritage Program is using Google Earth and Google Scholar to enable teams from around the world to assist the Iraq State Board of Antiquities to scientifically map and develop conservation plans for ten of Iraq’s most endangered sites.
  2. INDIA  - GHN teams in India and the U.S. have mapped all sites from the Indus Valley and Harappan civilization with direct links to Google Scholar articles and data on the Indus, providing a rich environment for advocacy and education.
  3. GUATEMALA - In Mirador, located in the heart of the Maya Biosphere in northern Guatemala, real-time fire data from NASA and high-resolution mapping in Google Earth has enabled GHF to alert the government, for the first time, to proactively extinguish raging fires threatening the Cradle of Maya Civilization, saving the last intact tropical forests in Central America.  Looting reports displayed in GHN and Google Earth™ enable park rangers to focus their efforts on threatened sites and prevent further illegal activities throughout the 600,000 acre archaeological and wildlife preserve.

Saving Our Global Heritage appears in the Global Awareness folder in Google Earth and is available now. GHF’s Saving Our Global Heritage campaign is raising awareness to stimulate global action to save our endangered heritage sites in developing countries.

"At Google we see great promise in the innovative ways non-profit organizations are using products like Google Earth to further their missions and reach new audiences," said John Hanke, Director of Google Earth and Maps.  "By leveraging advanced mapping technologies to advocate for the preservation of the world's most ancient and endangered cultural assets, Global Heritage Fund has created an incredibly rich resource for conservation experts, government officials and Google Earth users alike to explore and utilize for the public good."

Global Heritage Fund (GHF) is an international conservancy that preserves and restores endangered world heritage sites in developing countries.  625 Emerson Street Suite 200, Palo Alto, CA  94301. 
www.globalheritagefund.org   Phone:  +1.650.325.7520.

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