
Google Earth User Guide
● Table of Contents
● Introduction
● Finding Places and
Directions
● Marking Places
● Using Layers
● Using Map Features
● Using Places
● About KML
● Sharing Places
Information
● Touring Places
● Editing Places and
Folders
● Managing Search
Results
● Measuring Distances
and Areas
● Drawing Paths and
Polygons
● Using Image Overlays
and 3D Models
● Importing Your Data
Into Google Earth
● Using Style Templates
● Using GPS Devices with
Google Earth
● Making Movies with
Google Earth
● Keyboard Controls
● 3D Viewer Options
❍ Displaying a Lat/Lon Grid
■ Switching to Full Screen
Mode
■ Setting the View Size
3D Viewer Options
Some of the features described in this section are only available to users of the Google Earth EC product.
Learn more.
Google Earth provides a number of 3D viewer settings that you can modify, as well as features you can
activate for special 3D display. These include:
● Display a lat/lon grid over the 3D viewer
● Toggle between full-screen and window mode
● Set the view size of the 3D viewer to specific ratios
● Use the Overview window for additional perspective
● Modify view settings to suit your preferences
● Viewing Preferences
● Memory and Disk Cache Preferences
To show or hide the 3D viewer toolbar, click Tools > Toolbar.
Displaying a Lat/Lon Grid
Google Earth provides a special layer accessible from the View menu that displays a grid of latitude and
longitude lines over the imagery in the 3D viewer. To turn on the grid do one of the following:
● Select View > Lat/Lon Grid.
● Type Ctrl + L ( + L on the Mac)
The grid appears over the earth imagery as white lines, with each latitude/longitude degree line labeled
in an axis across the center of the 3D viewer. You can position a geographical feature in the 3D viewer
and determine its basic geo-spatial coordinates using this grid.
As you zoom in, the level of detail of the degree lines increases. For example, from an eye elevation of
about 100 miles, Las Vegas, Nevada, appears north of the 36th parallel, and just west of the 115th
meridian.
As you zoom to an eye altitude of just above 2000 feet, you can see that the marker for Las Vegas,
Nevada, sits at W115 08'11" and N36 10'29".
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