Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Map Projections Can you read a map?. Cartography ● The art and science of making maps, including data compilation, layout, and design. A stone tablet.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Map Projections Can you read a map?. Cartography ● The art and science of making maps, including data compilation, layout, and design. A stone tablet."— Presentation transcript:

1 Map Projections Can you read a map?

2 Cartography ● The art and science of making maps, including data compilation, layout, and design. A stone tablet found in a cave in Abauntz in the Navarra region of northern Spain is believed to contain the earliest known representation of a landscape.

3 Maps ● Visual representation of the earth’s surface or the phenomenon (any observable occurrence) that occur on the earth’s surface.

4 Map Scale ● The degree to which a map “zooms in” on the area it is representing. ● Scale tells you what extent the portion of the earth represented on the map has been reduced from its original size to fit on the map.

5 Scale Example ● For example, 1 inch on a map may equal 10 miles in the real world. ● That scale might be written as 1 inch = 10 miles. ● Sometimes, scale is indicated as a fraction. ● “1/10 miles” or “1:10 miles” means 1 inch on the map equals 10 miles in the real world.

6 THIS IS THE TRICKY PART “LARGE” OR “SMALL” scale. ● The more “zoomed in” the map is on an area, the larger is its map scale. ● large-scale map depicts a smaller area ● The less “zoomed in” the map is on an area, the smaller is its scale. ● Small-scale map depicts a larger area

7

8 The Earth is round...So? ● Transforming something spherical into something flat means that the 2-D image will never exactly represent what is visible in three-dimensions. ● Geographers use numerous mathematical equations to produce map projections.

9 Map Types

10 Reference Map ● Show locations of places and geographic features.

11 Thematic Map ● Tell a story about the degree of an attribute, the pattern of its distribution, or its movement.

12 Thematic Map

13 Contour Maps (Isopleths) ● Isolines- Lines on a map depicting areas of same or like values. ● Contour maps use isolines, or contour lines, to depict where the same elevation exists. ● The contour interval of a contour map is the difference in elevation between successive contour lines.

14 Contour Maps

15 Proportional Symbols Map ● The proportional symbol technique uses symbols of different sizes to represent data associated with different areas or locations within the map.

16 Proportional Symbols Map

17

18 ● A dot may be used to locate each occurrence of a phenomenon. ● Where appropriate, a dot may indicate any number of entities, for example, one dot for every 100 voters. Dot Map Military families in Ohio

19 Choropleth Map ● Shows statistical data in formal regions, such as counties or states, by coloring or shading these regions. ● For example, countries with higher rates of infant mortality might appear darker on a choropleth map.

20 Choropleth Map

21 Cartogram ● A cartogram is a map in which some thematic mapping variable is substituted for land area or distance. ● The geometry or space of the map is distorted in order to convey the information of this alternate variable.

22 Cartogram

23

24 GIS map ● A geographic information system (GIS) integrates hardware, software, and data for capturing, managing, analyzing, and displaying all forms of geographically referenced information. ● GIS allows us to view, understand, question, interpret, and visualize data in many ways that reveal relationships, patterns, and trends in the form of maps, globes, reports, and charts.

25 GIS map

26

27 Location Chart

28 Visualizations

29


Download ppt "Map Projections Can you read a map?. Cartography ● The art and science of making maps, including data compilation, layout, and design. A stone tablet."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google