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Mapping
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Maps Maps can depict visible surface features (towns), underground features (subways), and abstract features (political boundaries) Not possible to accurately represent round Earth on flat surface Spatial concepts on maps—distance, direction, density, diffusion, linkage, flow, arrangement, accessibility
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Latitude Equator marks the zero degree parallel and is fixed by the laws of nature Sailors measured latitude by length of day, height of sun, or known guide stars Angle measured north or south from equator from 0° to 90° Chicago--42° N
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Longitude Prime Meridian location is a political decision—Royal Observatory at Greenwich, England Longitude measured by time—each hour’s time difference between ship and home port indicated 15 degrees Intersect parallels at right angles Measured east or west 0° to 180° New York City--74° W
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Minutes and Degrees Basic latitude/longitude is degree
Each degree is divided into 60 minutes Each minute is divided into 60 seconds For more precision on a location, specify minutes or even seconds Sometimes degrees are written as decimals (36º N)
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Map Scale Relationship between distance on the map and distance on the ground Usually written as a fraction or ratio 1:10,000 or 1/10,000 (1 inch of measurement on the map equals 10,000 of same units on ground)
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Map Scales (from USGS.com)
1 to 24,000 scale 1 to 250,000 scale 1 to 100,000 scale
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Orientation Never Eat Soggy Waffles
North, East, South, West Can use clock for directional reference “Dolphins at 1:00”
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Good Map Elements (DOGSTAILS)
Date—when map was made Orientation—directions Grid—locates places on map Scale—map distance Title—what, where, when Author—who made map Index—map address of places Legend—what the symbols mean Sources—basis for map information
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Map Types Reference Thematic Political Physical Topographic Satellite
Choropleth Cartograms
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Map Problems When the National Geographic Society came out with it’s sixth Atlas edition, it contained approximately 10,000 changes, and was already out of date when it went for sale Countries argue over names Korea: East Sea Japan: Sea of Japan
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Why Maps Lie Cartographers are not licensed Maps distort reality
Single map is one of large number of maps that could be produced from same data Flat map stretches some distances and shortens others Simplification Generalization
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Common Map Errors Based on incompatible sources Misspelled place-names
Graytone symbols changed by poor printing Compiled from other maps Map drafters having fun and including fictitious towns International data based on inconsistent definitions
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Globe v. Map Peel an orange into four equal pieces and lay the pieces side by side on a flat surface. Observe how the landmasses fit together.
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Why we have different maps
Distortion exists with flat maps so cartographers use different projections to preserve selected properties (shape, size, distance, direction)
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Map Projections Mercator Projection
Good for navigation at sea because of straight lat/long lines Renders Greenland as large as South America (yet 1/8 of size) Flemish cartographer (1500s)
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Map Projections Robinson Projection
Accurate depiction of continent’s sizes and shapes Distortion greatest at poles
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Map Projection J. Paul Goode (1923) Homolosine Equal-Area Projection
Less distorted land masses by giving up continuous oceans
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Map Projection Conic Best for showing one section of Earth without much distortion
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Map Projection Polar Used mostly to show one hemisphere at a time
Accurate for distance and direction
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