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MAP PROJECTIONS AND SCALE

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Presentation on theme: "MAP PROJECTIONS AND SCALE"— Presentation transcript:

1 MAP PROJECTIONS AND SCALE
OUTLINE: scale definition types of scale projection definition projection properties and classification choosing a map projection

2 PROJECTIONS

3 THE GLOBE Advantages: most accurate map latitude and longitude lines
Disadvantages expensive to make cumbersome to handle and store difficult to measure not fully visible at one

4 PROJECTIONS Flat Map Curved Earth
process of transforming earth’s spherical surface to a flat map while maintaining spatial relationships. Curved Earth Flat Map

5 PROJECTIONS projection process involves stretching and distortion

6 PROJECTIONS no matter how the earth is divided up, it can not be unrolled or unfolded to lie flat (undevelopable shape).

7 PROJECTION PROCESS most projections are combinations of the following characteristics: characteristic of earth features that are maintained shape of the projection plane (developable shape) aspect of the projection plane points or lines of tangency or secancy location of the false ‘illumination source’

8 PROJECTION PROPERTIES
properties in which distortion is minimized when producing a map Area equal area or equivalent area sizes are correct everywhere on map shapes greatly distorted

9 PROJECTION PROPERTIES
Distance equidistant distance is correct in all directions from a point i.e. equidistant projection centered on Winnipeg would show the correct distance to any other location on the map, from Winnipeg only distorting area and/or direction

10 PROJECTION PROPERTIES
Equidistant

11 PROJECTION PROPERTIES
Direction azimuthal compass bearing is maintained in all directions only from a point shapes, distances and areas are badly distorted

12 PROJECTION PROPERTIES
Shape conformal shape maintains its shape across the map distorting area latitude and longitude cross at right angles used for navigation

13 PROJECTION PROPERTIES
Area Distance Direction Shape Equal-Area No Yes Equidistant Azimuthal Conformal

14 PROJECTION PROPERTIES
Tissot’s Indicatrix convenient way of showing distortion size and shape of the indicatrix will vary from one part of the map to another Mercator projection Equal-Area projection

15 PROJECTIONS made by projecting a globe onto a surface – developable surface distortion is least where developable surface touches the earth accomplished by use of geometry and mathematics Mercator:

16 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Tangent case – shape just touches the earth along a single line or at point. Secant case – shape intersects or cuts through earth as two circles.

17 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Conical globe sits under a cone, touching along pre-selected line of latitude projection developed by cutting cone lengthwise and unrolling

18 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
normal case: parallels – concentric circular arcs, meridians – straight equally spaced lines

19 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION

20 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Lambert conformal conic projection Albers equal-area conic projection

21 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Conical Distortion

22 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Conical Polyconic – envelopes globe with an infinite number of cones, each with its own standard parallel

23 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Cylindrical projected onto a cylinder which is also cut lengthwise and unrolled

24 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Cylindrical evenly spaced network of straight, horizontal parallels and straight vertical meridians (grid like)

25 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION

26 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Cylindrical Distortion projection of the entire world, significant distortion occurs at the higher latitudes parallels become further apart and poles can not be seen

27 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Cylindrical Distortion sizes of Greenland vs. Africa Mercator Projection True size

28 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Cylindrical straight line between any two points follows a single direction called a rhumb line useful in construction of navigational charts

29 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Planar/Azimuthal portion of earth’s surface is transformed from a perspective point to a flat surface

30 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Planar/Azimuthal perspective point/light source Light rays

31 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Planar/Azimuthal true direction only between center and other locations most often used to map polar regions

32 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
NORMAL TRANSVERSE OBLIQUE

33 CANADA PROJECTED Cylindrical Conic Planar

34 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Pseudo map projections Pseudocylindrical pseudoconic and pseudocylindrical projections - have curved meridians instead of straight ones

35 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Pseudo map projections modified projections - changes have been made to reduce the pattern of distortion or add more standard parallels modified to reduce the distortion in the size of areas

36 PROJECTION CLASSIFICATION
Pseudo map projections individual or unique projections – can not be easily related to one of the three developable geometric forms Goode’s Projection

37 CHOOSING PROJECTION depends on:
purpose for which the data is to be used property in which distortion is minimized extent and location of area

38 CHOOSING PROJECTION steps: size of area of interest
small area has little distortion, any projection. latitude of area of interest low-latitudes – cylindrical mid-latitudes – conical polar latitudes - planar

39 CHOOSING PROJECTION shape of area of interest:
E-W extent: conic or cylindrical N-S extent: cylindrical square or circular: planar purpose: navigation – planar or cylindrical world distributions – cylindrical specific locations - planar

40 COMMON PROJECTIONS Albers Equal-Area Conic
equal area, secant conical projection (two standard parallels) resembles earth graticule

41 COMMON PROJECTIONS Mercator cylindrical, conformal projection
angular relationships are preserved parallels and meridians appear as straight lines parallels are farther apart with increased distance from equator

42 COMMON PROJECTIONS Mercator
change in N-S scale exactly offset change in E-W direction (shapes preserved) scale is true at equator or at two standard parallels equidistant from equator all rhumb lines appear as straight lines, while great circle arcs are not (except equator and meridians) used primarily for navigation and large scale maps

43 COMMON PROJECTIONS Transverse Mercator
cylindrical, conformal projection similar to Mercator except the axis of projection cylinder is rotated 90o from polar axis scale is true along central meridian or along two straight lines equidistant from and parallel to central meridian used to portray areas with larger N-S than E-W extent.

44 COMMON PROJECTIONS Lambert Conformal Conic
conformal, secant conical projection with two standard parallels possesses true shape of small areas with area distortion concentric parallels (increasing intervals) and equally-spaced straight meridians

45 COMMON PROJECTIONS

46 COMMON PROJECTIONS

47 COMMON PROJECTIONS Mollweide pseudocylindrical, equal-area projection
N-S scale is decreased in high latitudes, increased in low latitudes; opposite in E-W direction parallels are straight, spaced closer together from equator

48 COMMON PROJECTIONS Polar Stereographic
directions are true from center point conformal projection: over a small area, angles in the map are the same as the corresponding angles on Earth's surface meridians are straight and radiating; parallels are concentric circles shows only one hemisphere

49 COMMON PROJECTIONS Polar Stereographic
preserves circles - all great and small circles are shown as concentric arcs or straight lines scale true only where the central parallel and meridian cross used in polar aspect for topographic maps of polar regions, regions that are circular in shape

50 COMMON PROJECTIONS Eckert IV Equal Area
pseudocylindrical and equal-area scale is true along the parallel at 40:30 North and South

51 COMMON PROJECTIONS Robinson
developed to minimize appearance of angular and area distortion distorts shape, area, scale and distance in an attempt to balance errors of projection properties

52 COMMON PROJECTIONS Robinson
based on tables of coordinates not mathematical formulae overall effect – more than 75% of earth is shown with less than 20% departure from true scale size used for thematic and reference maps

53 OTHER PROJECTIONS Berghaus Star

54 OTHER PROJECTIONS Sanson-Flamsteed

55 OTHER PROJECTIONS Conoalactic

56 OTHER PROJECTIONS Hammer

57 OTHER PROJECTIONS Eisenlohr

58 OTHER PROJECTIONS Gall Stereographic Cylindrical

59 OTHER PROJECTIONS Cassini

60 SCALE

61 SCALE size of an object on a map compared to the actual object on the ground may not be the same in all directions from a point

62 SCALE TYPES Verbal scale describes the scale in words
i.e. “one centimeter represents one kilometer” commonly found on popular atlases and maps

63 SCALE TYPES Visual scale (bar scale or graphic scale)
graphically illustrates relationship between map distance and ground distance. one end can be divided most common remains correct if reduced or enlarged

64 SCALE TYPES Visual scale (bar scale or graphic scale)

65 SCALE TYPES Representative Fraction (RF)
ratio (proportion) between map distance to earth distance i.e. 1:50,000 most versatile; not tied to any specific units

66 SCALE FACTOR Representative Fraction Globe distance Earth distance =
Map Scale: (e.g. 1:24,000) Map Projection: Scale Factor

67 SCALE FACTOR stated scale is correct only at selected points
statement of relation between given scale and actual scale value i.e. SF of would mean that actual scale is twice the principal scale

68 LARGE VS SMALL SCALE large scale: show a small area with a large amount of detail. small scale: show a large area with a small amount of detail all relative

69 DETERMING SCALE use map scale to convert map distance to ground distance. for verbal and RF scales - multiply by the scale, then convert the ground distance to units suitable for ground measurements. i.e. we have a map with a scale of 1:50,000. We measure the distance along a property boundary as 1.7 cm. What is the length in the real world? for graphic scales – mark off a distance on the map and compare it directly to the bar scale.

70 TRANSFORMING SCALES Verbal to RF
write verbal scale as a fraction then convert so that both numerator and denominator have the same units and numerator has a 1 i.e. convert verbal scale “1 cm represents 100 km” to RF RF to Verbal i.e. convert from RF of 1:25,000 to verbal scale, in metric

71 TRANSFORMING SCALES Graphic Scales and RF/Verbal
take the measurement from the bar scale to determine the map distance and corresponding ground distance. i.e. 10 km on ground measures 2.4 cm on map. use method for verbal scale to RF conversion.


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