>>9704183The shills say you can see the curve from near the ground, 150 feet or less...
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=soundly+lake+pontThe Universities Space Research Association says 40,000 feet...
Earth’s curvature can't be visually seen from any location on the ground, even from Mount Everest. Studies show that the threshold altitude for seeing the curvature is about 35,000 ft (10,668 m). Even then, it's barely discernible and the observer must have a wide angle field of view. Only aircraft flying much higher (commercial jets sometimes climb above 40,000 ft or 12,192m) offer an easy view of the curvature.
https://epod.usra.edu/blog/2014/11/photographing-the-curvature-of-the-earth-trickier-than-you-think.htmlThe BBC says...
BBC Earth Lab
Published on Jan 24, 2017
Flying to 70,000 feet, James May gets to see the curvature of the Earth as he reaches the edge of space
https://youtu.be/8OnJCqtTxsA?t=153Felix Baumgartner says he saw it at 120+ thousand feet...
14 October 2012 when Baumgartner landed in eastern New Mexico after jumping from a then world-record 38,969.3 metres (127,852 feet)[12][32][33] and falling a record distance of 36,402.6 metres (119,431 feet);
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felix_Baumgartner#Main_jumpBlack science man says you can't see it at any of those altitudes...
https://twitter.com/neiltyson/status/431554750119550976?lang=enhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHKvUFhkxAchttps://youtu.be/54xutVJIxUg?t=185https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yefscjx9EFYhttps://youtu.be/VCW-kis5yyA(127 852 feet) / (40 000 feet) =
3.1963
(119 431 feet) / (40 000 feet) =
2.985775