User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
mappings- Plural of mapping
Extensive Definition
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 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.
Geographic maps
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).
A map can also be any document giving information
as to where or what something is.
Orientation of maps
The term orientation
refers to the relationship between directions on a map and compass
directions. The word orient is derived from oriens,
meaning east. In the Middle Ages many maps, including the T and O
maps, were drawn with east at the top. Today the most common, but
far from universal, cartographic convention is that North is at the top
of a map. Examples of maps not oriented to north are:
- Reversed maps, also known as Upside-Down maps or South-Up maps, which generally show Australia and New Zealand at the top of the map instead of the bottom.
- Polar maps of the Arctic or Antarctic regions are conventionally centred on the pole, in which case the direction north would be towards or away from the centre of the map, respectively.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- Route and channel maps have traditionally been oriented to the road or waterway they describe.
- Many maps used in the Society for Creative Anachronism show the west at the top, in honour of the Society starting in California.
Scale and accuracy
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 to 10,000 of that same unit in reality. This allows the reader
to estimate the sizes of, and distances between, depicted objects.
A larger scale (i.e. the second number of the ratio is smaller)
shows more detail and supports more accurate
estimates, thus requiring a larger map to show the same area.
Highly detailed maps covering areas ranging upward in size from
small cities or counties to entire countries or continents are now often
published as
books, or computer software (with numerous tools to aid the user,
including user-adjustable scale and customized search engines), for
convenient handling. Printed versions may include a comprehensive
index, tables of distances between cities, and possibly even a
cross reference of important destinations. Computer software based
maps provide numerous tools to aid the user, including
user-adjustable scale (a.k.a "zoom") and customized search engines
to locate street
addresses.
Historically, large maps were presented (but not
necessarily published, due to prohibitive labor costs) as
scrolls, a famous example
of which is the recently rediscovered hand-made copy of the
Tabula
Peutingeriana.
For modern examples, published maps designed for
the hiker
(e.g.
USGS Topographic
maps, a.k.a. "Topos") are often scaled at the ratio of
approximately 1:25,000 , while maps designed for the motorist to display
major highways might be
scaled at 1:250,000 or 1:1,000,000 . In any case, a properly made
map will either state its scale, or declare that it is not scaled
and can not be reliably used to deduce distances.
Maps which use some quality other than physical
area to determine relative size are called cartograms.
A famous (non-cartogram) example of a map without
scale is the London Underground
map, which best fulfills its purpose by being less physically
accurate and more visually communicative to the hurried glance of
the commuter. This is
not a cartogram (since there is no consistent measure of distance)
but a topological map
that also depicts approximate bearings.
The simple maps shown on some directional road signs
are further examples of this kind.
In fact, most commercial navigational maps, such as
road maps and town plans, sacrifice an amount of accuracy in scale
to deliver a greater visual usefulness to its user, for example by
exaggerating the width of roads. With the end-user similarly
in mind, cartographers will censor the content of the space
depicted by a map in order to provide a useful tool for that user.
For example, a road map may or may not show railroads,
smaller waterways or
other prominent non-road objects, and if it does, it may show them
less clearly (e.g. dashed or dotted lines/outlines of various
colors) than highways.
Known as decluttering, the practice makes the subject matter the
user is interested in easier to read, usually without sacrificing
measurement 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.
Topographic maps, show elevation above (or depression
below) sea
level as contour
lines, a specific type of Isoline. Isolines on any map or chart
indicate the constant labeled value, such as elevation, temperature, or rainfall, for that particular line.
Depending on the type of a map, alternative representations of
elevation (or depression) exist as well.
World maps and projections
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.
Airplane 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. Reginald Buckminster Fuller patented one such Gnomonic projection in 1946 as the Dymaxion Map.
- 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 emphasize globally strategic "fronts" in the air age, pointing out proximities and barriers not apparent on a conventional rectangular projection of the world.
Electronic maps
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 as diverse as wildlife conservationists and militaries around the world.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, centred where possible on
the same point. In-car satellite
navigation 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.
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 (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.
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.Footnotes
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
- 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.
- Denis E. Cosgrove (ed.) Mappings. Reaktion Books, 1999 ISBN 1-86189-021-4
- Cartogram
- Compass rose
- Contour map
- Dymaxion map
- Estate maps
- Floor plan
- Geologic map
- Map design
- Nautical chart
- Pictorial maps
- Planform
- Plat
- Reversed map
- Road atlas
- Street map
- Thematic map
- Topographic map
- World map
- Censorship of maps
- Google Maps
- Japanese map symbols
- List of online map services
- MapQuest
- Maps of the UK and Ireland
- Maps of the United States
- NASA World Wind
- Ancient world maps
- George Bradshaw, including maps of the British railway network, first published in 1839
- History of cartography
- Ordnance Survey UK map agency
- Sanborn Maps - detailed American fire insurance maps
- Aerial landscape art
- Aerial photography
- Automatic label placement
- Geographic coordinate system
- Geography Cup
- Map database management
- Orthophoto
External links
- Geography and Maps, an Illustrated Guide, by the staff of the U.S. Library of Congress.
- , use of maps on Wikipedia
- Online map collections at the 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
- Google Maps
- Yahoo! Mapmixer
- Cool Maps
- National Geographic Map Machine
mappings in Arabic: خريطة
mappings in Aragonese: Mapa
mappings in Asturian: Mapa
mappings in Bengali: মানচিত্র
mappings in Bosnian: Karta
mappings in Bulgarian: Карта
mappings in Catalan: Plànol
mappings in Czech: Mapa
mappings in Welsh: Map
mappings in Danish: Kort (geografi)
mappings in German: Karte (Kartografie)
mappings in Estonian: Kaart (kartograafia)
mappings in Spanish: Mapa
mappings in Esperanto: Mapo
mappings in Persian: نقشه (زمین)
mappings in French: Carte géographique
mappings in Galician: Mapa
mappings in Classical Chinese: 地圖
mappings in Korean: 지도
mappings in Hindi: मानचित्र
mappings in Croatian: Karta
mappings in Indonesian: Peta
mappings in Icelandic: Kort
mappings in Italian: Mappa
mappings in Hebrew: מפה
mappings in Georgian: გეოგრაფიული რუკა
mappings in Swahili (macrolanguage):
Ramani
mappings in Latin: Tabula geographica
mappings in Luxembourgish: Landkaart
mappings in Lithuanian: Žemėlapis
mappings in Hungarian: Térkép
mappings in Malayalam: ഭൂപടം
mappings in Malay (macrolanguage): Peta
mappings in Dutch: Kaart (cartografie)
mappings in Japanese: 地図
mappings in Norwegian: Kart
mappings in Norwegian Nynorsk: Kart
mappings in Polish: Mapa
mappings in Portuguese: Mapa
mappings in Romanian: Hartă
mappings in Russian: Географическая карта
mappings in Scots: Cairt
mappings in Albanian: Harta
mappings in Simple English: Map
mappings in Slovak: Mapa
mappings in Slovenian: Zemljevid
mappings in Serbian: Карта (мапа)
mappings in Sundanese: Atlas
mappings in Finnish: Kartta
mappings in Swedish: Karta
mappings in Tagalog: Mapa
mappings in Tamil: நிலப்படம்
mappings in Thai: แผนที่
mappings in Vietnamese: Bản đồ
mappings in Tajik: Харита
mappings in Turkish: Harita
mappings in Ukrainian: Карта (зображення)
mappings in Yiddish: מאפע
mappings in Contenese: 地圖
mappings in Chinese: 地图