Ingo, I hope the dot points in our article are clear?
You need to download and then open the big TIFF file in a suitable graphics program, nothing fancy but one that will take that size of file, zoom in to your area of interest, select the area you want to use, than cut it out and get it saved as a .jpg file. Then this is the file you insert as the overlay.
Ingo, I hope the dot points in our article are clear?
You need to download and then open the big TIFF file in a suitable graphics program, nothing fancy but one that will take that size of file, zoom in to your area of interest, select the area you want to use, than cut it out and get it saved as a .jpg file. Then this is the file you insert as the overlay.
This one's wierd..... how come there's an enourmous light source in the middle of the ocean just south of Orbost in Victoria? Do we question its accuracy?
This one's wierd..... how come there's an enourmous light source in the middle of the ocean just south of Orbost in Victoria? Do we question its accuracy?
Cheers
Chris
Chris, if you look off Exmouth in WA and between WA/NT and Indonesia, you'll see similar light patches. It will be offshore oil and gas facilities. I am rather amazed at the Bass Strait light intensity however, they surely shouldn't be flaring much gas, unlike some places off the WA coast. Eric
That was never in question. I still reckon that the map indicates an inordinate amount of light for a few oil rigs. They are football field-sized, and even that there a few of them I wouldn't have thought they'd produce so much light - but I'm probably wrong.