Natural Resources CanadaGovernment of Canada
Satellite image of CanadaCanada Centre for Remote Sensing 
Anaglyphs

3.2 Anaglyphs

Anaglyphic viewing systems also rely on parallax and convergence. Here, filters of complementary colours, usually red and blue or red and green, are used to separate left and right projections. The viewer wears a pair of glasses which cover the left eye with green (or blue) and the right with red. The left eye sees the overlap of the left image in green (or blue) while the right eye simultaneously sees the overlap area of the right image in red. This produces a three dimensional perception. Although inexpensive, this method has some inherent limitations. The source data is limited to black and white imagery. Colour imagery results in ghost effects on an anaglyphic image. Applying red and green (or blue) filters to the original imagery causes light loss. This in turn causes some information to be lost. The red and green glasses may also cause eye fatigue.

Anaglyph image and glasses
Anaglyph image and glasses

2006-09-03
http://www.ccrs.nrcan.gc.ca/resource/tutor/stereo/chap3/chapter3_3_e.php