{"id" : "50b638b4918645bc83d6246b6c26f5f1", 
  "name" : "Cities.sd", 
  "owner" : "jgrayson", 
  "guid" : "", 
  "title" : "Cities", 
  "type" : "Feature Service", 
  "typeKeywords" : [
    "ArcGIS Server", 
    "Data", 
    "Feature Access", 
    "Feature Service", 
    "Metadata", 
    "Multilayer", 
    "Service", 
    "Hosted Service"
  ], 
  "description" : "\u003cp\u003e\u003cp\u003e\u003cspan style='mso-bidi-font-family:Calibri;mso-bidi-theme-font:\nminor-latin;background:white'\u003eApproximate back-in-time locations of 13 modern cities.\n You can see how they migrated during the 200 million years relative to\nthe geographic coordinates. Some cities moved a very long way, like Mumbai (Bombay).\nOthers, like Tokyo, moved less but with abrupt changes in direction. Oslo made\nthe most convoluted route, as it kept moving around on a relatively small area,\nnot too far from where it is currently located. The routes of Perth and\nMelbourne seem to be related to each other (not a big surprise), as do the\nSouth American cities Rio de Janeiro, Santiago and Caracas.\u003c/span\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\u003c/p\u003e", 
  "tags" : [
    "paleogeology", 
    "continental drift", 
    "paleogeography", 
    "plate tectonics"
  ], 
  "snippet" : "Approximate array of migrating locations of selected 13 world cities over 200 million years. ", 
  "thumbnail" : "thumbnail/thumbnail.png", 
  "extent" : [-122.737869607, -78.998387125, 
    155.236209874436, 59.8580565570001
  ], "categorites" : null, 
  "spatialReference" : "32662", 
  "url" : "https://services.arcgis.com/6DIQcwlPy8knb6sg/arcgis/rest/services/Cities/FeatureServer", 
  "culture" : "en-us", 
  "licenseInfo" : "No restrictions\u003cdiv\u003e\u003cbr /\u003e\u003c/div\u003e", 
  "accessInformation" : "Dr. Christopher Scotese, Northwestern University, and Dr. Nicky Wright, Australian National University http://www.earthbyte.org/paleodem-resource-scotese-and-wright-2018/", 
  "properties" : "", 
  "access" : "public", 
  "size" : 188416
}