2D geometric model
ABmaps
Adolphe Quetelet
Adventure racing
Adventure travel
Aerial landscape art
Aerial photography
Aeronautical chart
Alan MacEachren
Alleycat races
Amateur radio direction finding
Antarctica
ArcMap
Arctic
Arthur H. Robinson
Atlas
Automatic label placement
Azimuthal equidistant projection
Backpacking (travel)
Backpacking (wilderness)
Backpacking (wilderness)#Equipment
Ben Shneiderman
Bicycle touring
Biological data visualization
Brain mapping
Bruce H. McCormick
Buckminster Fuller
Canoe orienteering
Car orienteering
Cartogram
Cartography
Cathode ray tube
Censorship of maps
Charles Joseph Minard
Chart
Chemical imaging
Cholera
City map
Clifford A. Pickover
Compass
Compass direction
Compass rose
Computer graphics
Computer graphics (computer science)
Context (language use)
Contour line
Control point (orienteering)
Course (orienteering)
Crime mapping
DNA
Data visualization
Diagram
Digital geologic mapping
Digital raster graphic
Dymaxion map
Early world maps
Edo
Edward Tufte
Engineering drawing
Estate map
European Orienteering Championships
European Union
Eye protection
Fantasy map
Fault (geology)
Fell running
Floor plan
Flow visualization
Foot orienteering
Fortune (magazine)
Fox Oring
Frederik de Wit
GIS
Gaiters
Gantt chart
Geocaching
Geographia
Geographic coordinate system
Geographic information system
Geography
Geography Cup
Geoid
Geologic map
George Bradshaw
George G. Robertson
Geospatial
Geovisualization
Global Positioning System
Global navigation satellite system
Globe
Gnomonic projection
Google Earth
Google Maps
Graph drawing
Graph of a function
Graphic design
Great circle
Hand compass
Headlamp (outdoor)
Hereford Cathedral
ABmaps
Adolphe Quetelet
Adventure racing
Adventure travel
Aerial landscape art
Aerial photography
Aeronautical chart
Alan MacEachren
Alleycat races
Amateur radio direction finding
Antarctica
ArcMap
Arctic
Arthur H. Robinson
Atlas
Automatic label placement
Azimuthal equidistant projection
Backpacking (travel)
Backpacking (wilderness)
Backpacking (wilderness)#Equipment
Ben Shneiderman
Bicycle touring
Biological data visualization
Brain mapping
Bruce H. McCormick
Buckminster Fuller
Canoe orienteering
Car orienteering
Cartogram
Cartography
Cathode ray tube
Censorship of maps
Charles Joseph Minard
Chart
Chemical imaging
Cholera
City map
Clifford A. Pickover
Compass
Compass direction
Compass rose
Computer graphics
Computer graphics (computer science)
Context (language use)
Contour line
Control point (orienteering)
Course (orienteering)
Crime mapping
DNA
Data visualization
Diagram
Digital geologic mapping
Digital raster graphic
Dymaxion map
Early world maps
Edo
Edward Tufte
Engineering drawing
Estate map
European Orienteering Championships
European Union
Eye protection
Fantasy map
Fault (geology)
Fell running
Floor plan
Flow visualization
Foot orienteering
Fortune (magazine)
Fox Oring
Frederik de Wit
GIS
Gaiters
Gantt chart
Geocaching
Geographia
Geographic coordinate system
Geographic information system
Geography
Geography Cup
Geoid
Geologic map
George Bradshaw
George G. Robertson
Geospatial
Geovisualization
Global Positioning System
Global navigation satellite system
Globe
Gnomonic projection
Google Earth
Google Maps
Graph drawing
Graph of a function
Graphic design
Great circle
Hand compass
Headlamp (outdoor)
Hereford Cathedral
For other uses, see Map (disambiguation).
A map is a visual representation of an area—a symbolic depiction highlighting relationships between elements of that space such as objects, regions, and themes.
Many maps are static two-dimensional, geometrically accurate (or approximately accurate) representations of three-dimensional space, while others are dynamic or interactive, even three-dimensional. Although most commonly used to depict geography, maps may represent any space, real or imagined, without regard to context or scale; e.g. Brain mapping, DNA mapping, and extraterrestrial mapping.
Contents
1 Geographic maps
1.1 Orientation of maps
1.2 Scale and accuracy
1.3 Map types and projections
1.4 Electronic maps
2 Conventional signs
2.1 Labeling
3 Non geographical spatial maps
4 Non spatial maps
5 See also
6 Footnotes
7 References
8 External links
//
Geographic maps
A celestial map from the 17th century, by the Dutch cartographer Frederik de Wit.
Cartography, or map-making is the study, and often practice of crafting representations of the Earth upon a flat surface (see History of cartography), and one who makes maps is called a cartographer.
Road maps are perhaps the most widely used maps today, and form a subset of navigational maps, which also include aeronautical and nautical charts, railroad network maps, and hiking and bicycling maps. In terms of quantity, the largest number of drawn map sheets is probably made up by local surveys, carried out by municipalities, utilities, tax assessors, emergency services providers, and other local agencies. Many national surveying projects have been carried out by the military, such as the British Ordnance Survey (now a civilian government agency internationally renowned for its comprehensively detailed work).
In addition to location information maps may also be used to portray contour lines (isolines) indicating constant values of elevation, temperature, rainfall etc.
Orientation of maps
The Hereford Mappa Mundi, about 1300, Hereford Cathedral, England. A classic "T-O" map with Jerusalem at centre, east toward the top, Europe the bottom left and Africa on the right.
The orientation of a map is the relationship between the directions on the map and the corresponding compass directions in reality. The word "orient" is derived from Latin oriens, meaning East. In the Middle Ages many maps, including the T and O maps, were drawn with East at the top (meaning that the direction "up" on the map corresponds to East on the compass). Today, the most common – but far from universal – cartographic convention is that North is at the top of a map. Several kinds of maps are often traditionally not oriented with North at the top:
Maps from non-Western traditions are oriented a variety of ways. Old maps of Edo show the Japanese imperial palace as the "top", but also at the centre, of the map. Labels on the map are oriented in such a way that you cannot read them properly unless you put the imperial palace above your head.citation needed
Medieval European T and O maps such as the Hereford Mappa Mundi were centred on Jerusalem with East at the top. Indeed, prior to the reintroduction of Ptolemy's Geography to Europe around 1400, there was no single convention in the West. Portolan charts, for example, are oriented to the shores they describe.
Maps of cities bordering a sea are often conventionally oriented with the sea at the top.
Route and channel maps have traditionally been oriented to the road or waterway they describe.
Polar maps of the Arctic or Antarctic regions are conventionally centred on the pole; the direction North would be towards or away from the centre of the map, respectively. Typical maps of the Arctic have 0° meridian towards the bottom of the page; maps of the Antarctic have the 0° meridian towards the top of the page.
Reversed maps, also known as Upside-Down maps or South-Up maps, reverse the "North is up" convention and have South at the top.
Buckminster Fuller's Dymaxion maps are based on a projection of the Earth's sphere onto an icosahedron. The resulting triangular pieces may be arranged in any order or orientation.
Modern digital GIS maps such as ArcMap typically project north at the top of the map, but use math degrees (0 is east, degrees increase counter-clockwise), rather than compass degrees (0 is north, degrees increase clockwise) for orientation of transects. Compass decimal degrees can be converted to math degrees by subtracting them from 450.
Scale and accuracy
A 'global view map' of Europe, Middle East and Africa.
Early Canadian map back on auction block
It began with a stunning discovery last year in the attic of a Scottish estate: A previously unknown, 312-year-old hand-drawn map of Canada by John Thornton, one of the leading cartographers of 17th-century Europe. Expected to sell in January for up to $120,000 it ended up closer to $320,000. This weekend it's for sale again — this time for more than $600,000.
Google Maps
Online map service and location finder. Features dynamic, draggable maps and directions, as well as satellite imagery by region.
Many, but not all, maps are drawn to a scale, expressed as a ratio such as 1:10,000, meaning that 1 of any unit of measurement on the map corresponds exactly, or approximately, to 10,000 of that same unit on the ground. The scale statement may be taken as exact when the region mapped is small enough for the curvature of the Earth to be neglected, for example in a town planner's city map. Over larger regions where the curvature cannot be ignored we must use map projections from the curved surface of the Earth (sphere or ellipsoid) to the plane. The impossibility of flattening the sphere to the plane implies that no map projection can have constant scale: on most projections the best we can achieve is accurate scale on one or two lines (not necessarily straight) on the projection. Thus for map projections we must introduce the concept of point scale, which is a function of position, and strive to keep its variation within narrow bounds. Although the scale statement is nominal it is usually accurate enough for all but the most precise of measurements.
Large scale maps, say 1:10,000, cover relatively small regions in great detail and small scale maps, say 1:10,000,000, cover large regions such as nations, continents and the whole globe. The large/small terminology arose from the practice of writing scales as numerical fractions: 1/10000 is larger than 1/10000000. There is no exact dividing line between large and small but 1/100000 might well be considered as a medium scale. Examples of large scale maps are the 1:25000 maps produced for hikers; on the other hand maps intended for motorists at 1:250,000 or 1:1,000,000 are small scale.
It is important to recognise that even the most accurate maps sacrifice a certain amount of accuracy in scale to deliver a greater visual usefulness to its user. For example, the width of roads and small streams are exaggerated when they are too narrow to be shown on the map at true scale; that is, on a printed map they would be narrower than could be perceived by the naked eye. The same applies to computer maps where the smallest unit is the pixel. A narrow stream say must be shown to have the width of a pixel even if at the map scale it would be a small fraction of the pixel width.
Cartogram: The EU distorted to show population distributions.
Map row; fresh plea against industrialist Rahul Bajaj, others
New Delhi, Feb 1 (PTI) The map controversy has again come to hound industrialist and Rajya Sabha member Rahul Bajaj.After a lower court dismissed the complaint against Bajaj and other for allegedly misrepresenting India by showing Arunachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir as parts of China and Pakistan on their company website, a fresh petition has been filed in additional sessions judge court ...
Map of | MapQuest
Map search of provided by MapQuest. The consumer's choice for online maps and directions.
Some maps, called cartograms, have the scale deliberately distorted to reflect information other than land area or distance. For example, this map of Europe has been distorted to show population distribution, while the rough shape of the continent is still discernable.
Another example of distorted scale is the famous London Underground map. The basic geographical structure is respected but the tube lines (and the River Thames) are smoothed to clarify the relationships between stations. Near the center of the map stations are spaced out more than near the edges of map.
Further inaccuracies may be deliberate. For example, cartographers may simply omit military installations or remove features solely in order to enhance the clarity of the map. For example, a road map may not show railroads, smaller waterways or other prominent non-road objects, and even if it does, it may show them less clearly (e.g. dashed or dotted lines/outlines) than the main roads. Known as decluttering, the practice makes the subject matter that the user is interested in easier to read, usually without sacrificing overall accuracy. Software-based maps often allow the user to toggle decluttering between ON, OFF and AUTO as needed. In AUTO the degree of decluttering is adjusted as the user changes the scale being displayed.
Map types and projections
Main article: World map
Map of large underwater features. (1995, NOAA)
Maps of the world or large areas are often either 'political' or 'physical'. The most important purpose of the political map is to show territorial borders; the purpose of the physical is to show features of geography such as mountains, soil type or land use. Geological maps show not only the physical surface, but characteristics of the underlying rock, fault lines, and subsurface structures.
Maps that depict the surface of the Earth also use a projection, a way of translating the three-dimensional real surface of the geoid to a two-dimensional picture. Perhaps the best-known world-map projection is the Mercator projection, originally designed as a form of nautical chart.
Aeroplane pilots use aeronautical charts based on a Lambert conformal conic projection, in which a cone is laid over the section of the earth to be mapped. The cone intersects the sphere (the earth) at one or two parallels which are chosen as standard lines. This allows the pilots to plot a great-circle route approximation on a flat, two-dimensional chart.
Azimuthal or Gnomonic map projections are often used in planning air routes due to their ability to represent great circles as straight lines.
Richard Edes Harrison produced a striking series of maps during and after World War II for Fortune magazine. These used "bird's eye" projections to emphasise globally strategic "fronts" in the air age, pointing out proximities and barriers not apparent on a conventional rectangular projection of the world.
Electronic maps
A USGS digital raster graphic.
MAP: Nunavut water licence inspections
Map showing Nunavut communities that did not comply with federal law or have current water licences when federal inspections took place in 2010.
From the last quarter of the 20th century, the indispensable tool of the cartographer has been the computer. Much of cartography, especially at the data-gathering survey level, has been subsumed by Geographic Information Systems (GIS). The functionality of maps has been greatly advanced by technology simplifying the superimposition of spatially located variables onto existing geographical maps. Having local information such as rainfall level, distribution of wildlife, or demographic data integrated within the map allows more efficient analysis and better decision making. In the pre-electronic age such superimposition of data led Dr. John Snow to discover the cause of cholera. Today, it is used by agencies of the human kind, as diverse as wildlife conservationists and militaries around the world.
Relief map Sierra Nevada
Even when GIS is not involved, most cartographers now use a variety of computer graphics programs to generate new maps.
Interactive, computerised maps are commercially available, allowing users to zoom in or zoom out (respectively meaning to increase or decrease the scale), sometimes by replacing one map with another of different scale, centered where possible on the same point. In-car global navigation satellite systems are computerised maps with route-planning and advice facilities which monitor the user's position with the help of satellites. From the computer scientist's point of view, zooming in entails one or a combination of:
replacing the map by a more detailed one
enlarging the same map without enlarging the pixels, hence showing more detail by removing less information compared to the less detailed version
enlarging the same map with the pixels enlarged (replaced by rectangles of pixels); no additional detail is shown, but, depending on the quality of one's vision, possibly more detail can be seen; if a computer display does not show adjacent pixels really separate, but overlapping instead (this does not apply for an LCD, but may apply for a cathode ray tube), then replacing a pixel by a rectangle of pixels does show more detail. A variation of this method is interpolation.
A world map in PDF format.
For example:
Typically (2) applies to a Portable Document Format (PDF) file or other format based on vector graphics. The increase in detail is, of course, limited to the information contained in the file: enlargement of a curve may eventually result in a series of standard geometric figures such as straight lines, arcs of circles or splines.
(2) may apply to text and (3) to the outline of a map feature such as a forest or building.
(1) may apply to the text as needed (displaying labels for more features), while (2) applies to the rest of the image. Text is not necessarily enlarged when zooming in. Similarly, a road represented by a double line may or may not become wider when one zooms in.
The map may also have layers which are partly raster graphics and partly vector graphics. For a single raster graphics image (2) applies until the pixels in the image file correspond to the pixels of the display, thereafter (3) applies.
'Call Of Duty: Black Ops' First Strike Map Pack Buyers Have Download Issues
The "First Strike" map pack for "Call of Duty: Black Ops" is out today on Xbox Live Marketplace, bringing four new multiplayer maps and one new zombie map to the already features-packed experience. It's exciting stuff if you're a "Black Ops" fan... provided you're able to download the thing that is. I grabbed my own map [...]
See also: Webpage (Graphics), PDF (Layers), MapQuest, Google Maps, Google Earth, OpenStreetMap or Yahoo! Maps.
Conventional signs
The various features shown on a map are represented by conventional signs or symbols. For example, colors can be used to indicate a classification of roads. These signs are usually explained in the margin of the map, or on a separately published characteristic sheet.1
Labeling
To communicate spatial information effectively, features such as rivers, lakes, and cities need to be labeled. Over centuries cartographers have developed the art of placing names on even the densest of maps. Text placement or name placement can get mathematically very complex as the number of labels and map density increases. Therefore, text placement is time-consuming and labor-intensive, so cartographers and GIS users have developed automatic label placement to ease this process.23
Non geographical spatial maps
Maps exist of the solar system, and other cosmological features such as star maps. In addition maps of other bodies such as the Moon and other planets are technically not geological maps.
Non spatial maps
Many diagrams such as Gantt charts display logical relationships between items, and do not display spatial relationships at all.
Many maps are topological in nature, and the distances are completely unimportant, and only the connectivity is significant.
See also
Atlas portal
General
Atlas
Automatic label placement
Cartography
Geography
Globe
Map–territory relation
Map design and types
Aeronautical chart
Cartogram
City map
Compass rose
Contour map
Dymaxion map
Estate map
Fantasy map
Floor plan
Geologic map
Map design
Nautical chart
Pictorial maps
Planform
Plat
Reversed map
Road atlas
Street map
Thematic map
Topographic map
World map
Modern maps
Censorship of maps
Google Maps
Japanese map symbols
List of online map services
MapQuest
Maps of the UK and Ireland
Map of the United States
NASA World Wind
Orthophotomap - A map created from Orthophotography
ABmaps
Intermap Technologies
AccuTerra
Map history
Early world maps
George Bradshaw, including maps of the British railway network, first published in 1839
History of cartography
List of cartographers
Ordnance Survey UK map agency
Sanborn Maps - detailed American fire insurance maps
Related Topics
Aerial landscape art
Aerial photography
Automatic label placement
Digital geologic mapping
Geographic coordinate system
Geography Cup
Index map
Map database management
National Mine Map Repository
Footnotes
^ Ordnance Survey, Explorer Map Symbols; Swisstopo, Conventional Signs; United States Geological Survey, Topographic Map Symbols.
^ Imhof, E., “Die Anordnung der Namen in der Karte,” Annuaire International de Cartographie II, Orell-Füssli Verlag, Zürich, 93-129, 1962.
^ Freeman, H.,, Map data processing and the annotation problem, Proc. 3rd Scandinavian Conf. on Image Analysis, Chartwell-Bratt Ltd. Copenhagen, 1983.
References
David Buisseret, ed., Monarchs, Ministers and Maps: The Emergence of Cartography as a Tool of Government in Early Modern Europe. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992, ISBN 0-226-07987-2
Denis E. Cosgrove (ed.) Mappings. Reaktion Books, 1999 ISBN 1-86189-021-4
Freeman, Herbert, Automated Cartographic Text Placement. White paper.
Ahn, J. and Freeman, H., “A program for automatic name placement,” Proc. AUTO-CARTO 6, Ottawa, 1983. 444-455.
Freeman, H., “Computer Name Placement,” ch. 29, in Geographical Information Systems, 1, D.J. Maguire, M.F. Goodchild, and D.W. Rhind, John Wiley, New York, 1991, 449-460.
Mark Monmonier, How to Lie with Maps, ISBN 0-226-53421-9
O'Connor, J.J. and E.F. Robertson, The History of Cartography. Scotland : St. Andrews University, 2002.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: maps
Un-Intentional Maps A blog showing pictures of things that look like maps
Maps-For-Free.com Free global relief maps
Geography and Maps, an Illustrated Guide, by the staff of the U.S. Library of Congress.
Historical Maps from the Hargrett Library Collection (University of Georgia) - browse over 1000 maps from as early as 1544. DjVu format; requires free plugin or JAVA
The History of Cartography Project at the University of Wisconsin, a comprehensive research project in the history of maps and mapping
Mapping History Project - University of Oregon
Mapping the World The Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division at The New York Public Library
Online map collections at the Library of Congress
John H.W. Stuckenberg Map Digital Collection at Gettysburg College
Journal of Maps
History Maps
Interactive map of Belarus
v · d · eAtlas
Library of Congress to display 1st US map sold for record $1.8mn
Washington, Feb 1 : Visitors to the Library of Congress will soon be able to view the first map of the United States, thanks to a philanthropist who snapped it for a record price of 1.8 million dollars at an auction.
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Atlas · Cartography · Geography · Map · Map projection · Topography
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Fields
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v · d · eOrienteering
History
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Sport disciplines
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Other sports
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List of orienteering events
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Elegy Hotel
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Wikimapia - Let's describe the whole world!
Wikimapia is an online editable map - you can describe any place on Earth. Or just surf the map discovering tonns of already marked places.
Library of Congress to display 1st US map sold for record $1.8mn
Washington, Feb 1 (ANI): Visitors to the Library of Congress will soon be able to view the first map of the United States, thanks to a philanthropist who snapped it for a record price of 1.8 million dollars at an auction.
Bing Maps
Maps of the world, street map search, route planner, directions and traffic, satellite and aerial images, birds eye view, yellow pages, 3D cities, white pages, and more.
Map of Proposed Fox and New Paxon Military Operations Area Expansion
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ISR''s new seismic map to predict quake probability, magnitude
Ahmedabad, Jan 31 (PTI) The Institute of Seismological Research (ISR) has prepared a new seismic zone map of India which gives a more accurate picture along with probability and magnitude estimate of possible earthquakes in specific areas of the country."The present earthquake zoning map of the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) has divided India into four zones, but our map, after a research work ...



















