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Explore the history of maps, from ancient Babylonian clay tablets to modern GIS technology. Learn about early views of the Earth, conceptualizations of its shape, and advancements in cartography. Discover different types of maps and their purposes.
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Environmental GIS Nicholas A. Procopio, Ph.D, GISP nick@drexel.edu
Map Review • A map is defined as a representation, normally to scale and on a flat medium, of a selection of material or abstract features on, or in relation to, the surface of the Earth.
Map Characteristics • Usually out of date • Show only a static situation – one slice of time • Often elegant/artistic (much more so in distant past, more functional in recent times)
History of Maps • Earliest direct evidence of mapping comes from the middle east. • Thought to be Babylonian clay tablets that depict the earth as a flat circular disk • Most date it as 2,300-2,500 B.C.
Early Views of the Earth • Thales (625-547 BC) proposes a disc on an ocean • Anaximander (611 – 554 BC) proposes a cylinder with the land curving on its surface • Pythagoras (6th century) – proposes a sphere due to geometrical perfection.
Early View of the Earth • Cartography became considerably advanced in ancient Greece. • The concept of a spherical Earth was well known among Greek philosophers by the time of Aristotle (ca. 350 B.C.) and has been accepted by geographers since.
Conceptualizing the Earth • Eratosthenes (276 – 195 BC) first calculated the circumference of the earth. • Value was determined to be 24,663 - 27,967miles • Actual value is 24,902 miles
Conceptualizing the Earth • Ptolomey • Defined the elements and form of scientific cartography • Created first projection in 150 AD
Ptolemy’s View of the World • Ptolemy promulgated a value for the circumference of the earth much less than the actual number • This would have a significant impact on human history • By observing Ptolemy’s work, it appeared to Columbus that Asia was much closer to Europe
Early Map Forms • As Europe entered the Dark Ages, the ideas about the shape of the earth were gradually lost. • In Europe, the view of the earth is based primarily on theologic premises. The map became a religious statement as opposed to a geographic tool. • Many outlying areas are decorated with religious symbols and mythical figures.
Early Arabic Maps • Al-Idrisi was the leading mapmaker of the Middle Ages • His world map (shown with south oriented at the top) was world renown
Early Maps • Early European explorers often drew maps of newly discovered coastlines.
Mercator • In the 16th Century, Mercator created the Mercator projection • Allows mariners to sail to their destinations by following a rhumb line
A rhumb line is a line or direction on the surface of the earth that follows a single compass bearing and makes the same angle with all meridians, resulting in a curved spiraling toward the poles
Early Maps • Waldseemüller's world map, 1507 • The first map to incorporate New World discoveries.
Advancements in Cartography • In the late 17th Century, Newton proposes that the earth is not a true sphere but an oblate spheroid • Proposal submitted as a corollary to his theory of gravitation
Advancements in Cartography • In the late 17th Century and early 18th century, measurements of degrees of latitude support Newton’s proposal that the earth is an oblate spheroid • The length of a degree of latitude decreases northward, suggesting the earth flattens toward the top • Soon after the establishment of degrees of latitude, degrees of longitude are established
Greenwich Prime Meridian • The Prime Meridian, the first line of longitude, was established in 1884 • The prime meridian was established as a means of developing a navigational and timekeeping standard, as the pace of development and travel accelerated in the 19th century
Greenwich Prime Meridian • In 1884, 25 countries reached agreement at a conference in Washington, USA, that the Greenwich Meridian would be adopted as the `Prime Meridian' (zero degrees) from which time could be set and from which other points of longitude could be calculated
Greenwich Prime Meridian • Before the establishment of the prime meridian in 1884, almost every town in the world kept its own local time!
Advancements in Cartography • In the 18th Century, there is a rapid expansion of thematic mapping • Various layers of spatial data on a series of similar base maps • 18th Century maps of the Battle of Yorktown, drawn by French cartographer Louis-Alexandre Berthier contained hinged overlays to show troop movement.
Types of Maps • Reference map • Shows the simplest properties of the map data • Often display political boundaries, streams, roads, and towns • Thematic map • Show colored, grouped, or coded information on a particular theme
Types of Maps • Topographic - a reference tool, showing the outlines of selected natural and man-made features of the Earth
Types of Maps • Thematic map - a tool to communicate geographical concepts such as the distribution of population densities, climate, movement of goods, land use etc.
Chloropleth Maps • Choropleth map - uses reporting zones such as counties or census tracts to show data such as average incomes, percent female, or rates of mortality
Isopleth Maps • Isopleth map - shows an imaginary surface by means of lines joining points of equal value, "isolines"
Area Class Maps • Area class map - shows zones of constant attributes, such as vegetation, soil type, or forest species
Other Types of Maps • Graduated symbol map • Symbols locate features and the size of the symbol correlates to the value of the feature
Other Types of Maps • Dot map • Dots depict locations of features
Map Features • Title • Symbols • Legend • North Arrow • Place-names • Credits • Inset • Scale
Symbols • Map symbols are the representations of the real-world features. The mapmaker can assign a certain symbol to represent a feature but most maps follow a specific guideline for representing features.
Legend • The legend lists the symbols used on a map and what they depict • The symbols should appear on the legend exactly as they do on the map
North Arrow • The question of “what is north” can be an issue on some maps • The earth has a “true” north and a “magnetic” north • Most maps reference true north
Inset • Occasionally, data and observations may be densely cluttered in small sections of a map. • The mapmaker provides insets to zoom in to these cluttered locations
Scale • The amount of reduction that occurs when taking the real world and expressing it as a map • In most maps, scale is extremely important • Scale can be indicated by • Verbal (1 inch equals 2000 feet) • Numeric (1:24,000) • Graphic
Scale • Large scale map features are relatively large. Small scale map features are relatively small. • Large Scale 1:1000 • Small Scale 1:250000
More Detail <--------- ----------> Less Detail 1:24,000 1:100,000 1:500,000 1:1,000,000 Scale Small Scale Large Scale