But it's not out of the realm of possibility. I'm not saying that'll happen, it hasn't yet. I mention this, because one of the things that surprise people when driving a hybrid car, is the fact that the engine shuts off at lights. Satellite images have revealed a giant face that appears to be carved into the Earth in Alberta, Canada, which has now become known far. Someday they may even use psychoacoustics to mimic the noise of an engine. Badlands Guardian face in Canada is also known as Indian Head is a geomorphological feature located near Medicine Hat in the south east corner of Alberta. Psychoacoustics in vehicles doesn't stop with the slam of a car door either, they also engineer the click of the locks. Among them is a giant head known as the Badlands Guardian. The sound with the highest perceived value had an after sound - imagine a ‘ker-chunk. “But to our surprise, the ‘short duration and clean tail’ didn’t hold. Our hypothesis that a low-frequency thud with a short duration and no trailing sound would be perceived as the most ‘high class’ vehicle was correct in terms of frequency - a low, soft thud seems ‘fancier’ than a high frequency one,” he explains. This feature known as the Badlands Guardian was first discovered in Google Earth imagery in 2005. Twenty-five miles east of the town of Medicine Hat in Alberta Canada is a landform that resembles a face looking due west. There have been quite a number of apparent faces discovered in the Earth’s terrain including what is claimed to be an image of Jesus in a large field but perhaps the most amazing is one found in the mountains of Alberta. Figure 1 The Badlands Guardian is barely evident in Alberta’s earliest air photos taken in 1949-1951. (Google Maps) It's a hidden wonder, all right, and mind blowing enough to be named one of the. The feature was discovered in 2005 by Lynn Hickox through use of Google Earth. The Badlands Guardian is a geomorphological feature located near Medicine Hat in the southeast corner of Alberta, Canada. Here's what a study performed by his psychoacoustics found out about the noise our car doors make when slammed: The letters span across a 3km stretch and they make for quite a sight on Google Earth. The Badlands Guardian is located about 300 kilometres southeast of Alberta's Royal Tyrrell Museum. Badlands Guardian in 1938, before the creation of the road that resembles the earphones. This is according to Jonathan Berger, a music professor at Stanford University’s Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics. Theory of the 'Badlands Guardian' of Medicine Hat, Alberta, with 'Pan' in his Crown, discovered by Lynn Hickox. It has sparse vegetation and soft, clay soil. It receives little but intense showers of rain. The area covered by the Badlands Guardian is an arid land. The precise location of the Badlands Guardian on Google Earth is at the coordinates (50 0'38.20'N, 110 06' 48.32'W). What's one of the things all of us do when we're looking at a new car? We shut the car's door, a lot of times, right in the showroom of the car dealer. The Guardian is regarded as one of Google Earth’s most remarkable finds.
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