![]() Praia Grande, Brazil, in Google Earth with an HFOV of 35° and ‘Photorealistic Atmosphere’. Praia Grande, Brazil, in Google Maps’ ‘Earth’ view. Note how the marked building and hill in the distance look further away than in the Google Maps screen shot below. Add the Google Earth image to the project, and. Under XY Coordinate Systems available, click Geographic coordinate system > World > WGS 1984. ![]() In the Map Properties dialog box, select Coordinate Systems. In the Contents pane, right-click Map, and click Properties. Praia Grande, Brazil, with Google Earth’s default settings. In a new, blank ArcGIS Pro project, set the coordinate system to WGS 1984. In addition, you may want to try turning on ‘Photorealistic Atmosphere’ in Google Earth’s settings to get the colours to match up a bit better. So to match up a given location you need to download this KML file, which adjusts Google Earth’s HFOV to 35 degrees. After some experimentation we reckon that Google Earth by default uses a horizontal field of view (HFOV) of about 60° and Google Maps uses a HFOV of about 35° for its ‘Earth’ view. Last year we showed you how to change the field of view in Google Earth using a tour KML. The main reason for this is that Google Earth by default has a different Field of View from Google Maps. We recently noticed that if you look at a given place in both Google Earth and Google Maps’ ‘Earth’ view, they look a bit different, with distant objects looking closer in Google Maps than in Google Earth.
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