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Anyone know about maps?

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mummytait | 21:21 Wed 29th Mar 2006 | Science
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Can anyone please tell me where the additional triangles come from when a globe is opened out and flattened to make a 2d world map.


p.s. This is a serious question

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well imagine cutting up a globe yourself and laying it out flat. to Go from a sphere to a flat surface means that certain edges won't meet.
Question Author

Yes. Quite. That's what i'm getting at. Surely some countries are represented bigger than they actually are and proportionally some are smaller.


Thanks anyway loosehead. Great name by the way.


from what i have read, no map of the world is 100% to scale. i think one of the reasons is that the globe isnt a true sphere. so to get all land mass on one map, they are out of proportion.
No the triangles are the bits where there is nothing, the bigger counties do look different when flat, Russia being the most obvious but the size is the same.

It's not exact for the reasons given by Funkymoped but the distortion is negligible.

The sort of world map you are describing is in effect a series of maps, joined together.


Distances are proportional to reality throughout each central meridian - ie throughout each north-south line on the map which ends in a point on the map - and along all parallels.


Shapes are more distorted the nearer to the edge of each triangle of map you get, with the length of meridians being exaggerated so that countries nearer the poles appearing more stretched north to south than they should be. Hence the more triangles you have, the less the distortion (since the edge of each triangle will be closer to its central meridian, where distances are represented accurately) though it can never be eliminated because of the problem of representing a 3-D shape (the globe) on a 2-D surface (the map).


As Loosehead points out, the empty triangles are places where there is nothing, though the edges of each empty triangle are in reality next to each other.



These maps are apparently called "Interrupted sinusoidal projections".


Wikipedia gives an explanation at


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinusoidal_projection

As most have pointed out - there is a problem representing a 3D, spherical (or geoid / oblate spheroid) on a 2D surface.
This is a problem as old as they have known the Earth to be 'round' and attempted to map it.
In small portions, the errors are negligible - over greater areas - the problems are great.
Probably one of the most familiar 'World maps' is the Mercator projection (projection being the representation of the globe in two dimensions). This shows the continents and oceans sure enough, but the scale is not constant:- land (or sea) areas are exaggerated and relative distances are altered, depending on where you are on the map.
For example - in terms of surface area, the British Isles appear much bigger than countries of equal area close to the equator.
Similarly, Antarctica (and some of the northern polar land masses) appear as almost continuous strips of land along the top and bottom of the map.
By the same virtue, it is difficult to see why the Titanic was up towards the Arctic Circle whilst sailing from Cobh to New York - on a map it seems a straight-enough journey "straight across" the Atlantic (New York is about the same latitude as Madrid) � but the shortest route on a globe is via a Great Circle.

These are all problems associated with trying to 'map' a 3D figure. The Mercator projection puts undue prominence on those countries of the mid-latitudes - hence the "British Empire" map, when, apart from half the map being painted pink, the British Isles were an enormous pair of islands somewhere around 50�N.
[cont..]

[..cont]

The modern Peters Projection attempts to portray an equal-area projection, so that, say, a small, northern hemisphere country does not appear the same size on the map as the entire Indian Sub-Continent.

True, it has been used in a �PC� context to counter the undue prominence of certain �Western� nations in temperate latitudes � but as a lover of maps � it is interesting nonetheless.

I will leave it to the likes of madein78 and Lonnie to hark to the times when �Britain� (ie. England � so it�s tough if you aren�t English) was �Great� and half the globe was pink. (though madein will probably take this to mean �they was poof-tahs�).


'Half the globe' only appeared to be under the British Empire because of the flattering projection.

Here is an interesting site which discusses the various projections:


http://www.diversophy.com/petersmap.htm


i believe in ye olden days before mercator maps became popular, seafarers would use maps which accurately portrayed the distance between bodies but the shape of the bodies would be distorded. as a result, sailing from uk to india for example may take as long as you planned but you may land in a different place than you planned, or if your destination was a small island you may miss it altogether. thank you very much gps
Question Author

Woah!


Thanks guys, I knew I could rely on you!!!


MummyT


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