Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byHorace Jackson Modified over 9 years ago
1
Map Skills
2
What is a map? A map is a representation, usually on a flat surface, of the features of an area of the earth or a portion of the heavens, showing them in their respective forms, sizes, and relationships according to some convention of representation. Now what does that mean?
3
A map is a representation, A map is a drawing or model usually on a flat surface, of a round Earth on a flat surface, of the features of an area of the earth that shows the landforms (mountains, rivers, etc.) or a portion of the heavens, or part of the sky in a particular region, showing them in their respective forms, sizes, and relationships drawn to scale according to some convention of representation. using an accepted form of drawing or model.
4
Types of Maps There are three basic types of maps: PHYSICAL POLITICAL and THEMATIC.
5
Physical Maps Physical maps show the natural features of the Earth. Physical maps do not contain man made features. For example, a physical map would be a map of what you would see if you were looking down on Earth from space.
6
When you look at this map, what do you see? Notice you do not see country borders or city markings. These divisions are created by people. For example, there is no actual line dividing Texas from its bordering states. Although some astronauts (with the use of binoculars believe it or not) are able to see roads, large ocean tankers, and even the Great Pyramids from space, at very high altitudes, none of these are visible and all you are left with are natural land formations.
7
Political Maps Unlike physical maps, political maps show how humans have impacted the landscape (HEI). For example, city names, roads, country borders, etc. are all part of political maps. Political maps change frequently (physical maps change very, very slowly through geologic processes) and must be redrawn often. A political map of the world that is 50 years old is no longer accurate. (July 9, 2011) Wars and ethnic conflict are two major causes political maps change.
8
Political Maps
9
Thematic Maps Thematic maps can represent a variety of information including things like climate, precipitation, vegetation, elevation, population, life expectancy, etc. Thematic maps are generally used when you are looking at a single piece of information.
11
The Round Earth Map Projections Map Projections
12
Map projections Project a round globe onto a flat surface Options? Stretch out some areas Cut out some areas Shrink some areas
13
Map projections Four properties to consider –Size- Area (equal-area or equivalent) –Shape (conformal) –Distance (equidistant) –Direction How large an area? Purpose of the map Ulterior motives?
14
What is in a picture? Example: The Mercator projection has straight meridians & parallels that intersect at right angles, as opposed to the Robinson projection. –Mercator preserves area only at the equator and at two standard parallels equidistant from the equator. –The Mercator projection is often used for marine navigation as all straight lines on the map are lines of constant azimuth. –Any one projection cannot simultaneously preserve all these qualities of the world: shape, area, direction, and distance.
15
A Satellite View
16
Africa’s Size # Second largest continent 11,700,000 sq. mi. # 10% of the world’s population. # 2 ½ times the size of the U. S. 5000MILES5000MILES 4 6 0 0 M I L E S
17
Conic projections Best for hemispheres or small regions Area and shape only slightly distorted
18
Planar projections Equidistant; good for navigation Only good for one hemisphere Distorts area, not shape
19
Other projections Based on more complicated math Interrupted, oval, combination Goode Robinson
20
Fuller’s Dymaxion
21
Cartogram
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.