Technology | Google Maps Digging Through Planet Earth? Here's Where You'd Appear AntipodeMap.com shows your geographic 'opposite' By Neal Colgrass Posted May 12, 2012 3:35 PM CDT Copied In this image released by Warner Bros., Anita Briem, left, Brendan Fraser and Josh Hutcherson, right, are shown in a scene from "Journey to the Center of the Earth." (AP Photo/Warner Bros.) A journey through the center of the Earth would spit you out on the other side—but where? A Google Maps-based website aims to answer that question. AntipodeMap.com allows you to pick a location and automatically see the spot on the opposite side of the globe, Mashable reports. Most of the continental US, for example, is opposite the Indian Ocean. San Francisco's antipodal point: just southeast of Madagascar. Find out your own geographic antipode here. (Or check out something even weirder that Google Earth spotted—in the Gobi Desert.) Read These Next Colbert tells audience it's curtains for his Late Show. The country of Eswatini is about to be on your radar. This is why you don't wear metal in MRI rooms. Two of Iran's enrichment sites reportedly could be back soon. Report an error