The Dictionary of Human Geography

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corridor corresponding to a ground swathe 50
metres across. Because the exaggeration is
much greater at very small scales as well as for
boundariesand contourlines,whichinprinciple
have no width, the map author must not only
eliminate less significant features but also
smooth out meandering streams and contorted
coastlines, displace symbols that would other-
wise overlap, and replace the intricate boundar-
ies of small cities with tiny circles (Dutton,
1999). Visibility and coherence might also re-
quire, as examples, the widening of narrow en-
trances to important bays, the exaggeration of
an important kink (jog) in a road, the amalgam-
ation of distinct but adjoining patches for
forested land, and the blurring of distinctions
between diverse types of cropland. Additional
accommodations are often needed to create
room for important labels – although well-
known abbreviations can shorten street and fea-
ture names, failure to label key features invites
confusion or misinterpretation.
Generalization can be especially problem-
atic with statistical maps, which are notorious
for using aggregated counts or averages to de-
scribe trends incensusdata. A uniform area
symbol for a large, inherently diversenation
or county can suggest an unwarranted homo-
geneity as well as dilute coherent patterns ob-
vious on maps with smaller, more reliable areal
units (Crampton, 2004). Potentially trouble-
some arechoroplethmaps, readily generated
with commercial, off-the-shelf mapping soft-
ware that arbitrarily chops the range from low-
est to highest data values into five equal
intervals, which are then portrayed with a
spectral sequence of hues (blue, green, yellow,
orange, red) that defies the logical darker-
means-more metaphor for area symbols repre-
senting intensity data (Brewer, 1997).
Maps can be categorized in numerous ways,
to reflect their content (e.g., topographic map,
street map), symbolization (e.g., choropleth
map), intended use (e.g.,cadastral mapping,
road map), publisher (e.g., government map,
commercial map), format (e.g. wall map, atlas
map, newspaper map) or medium (e.g. paper
map, video map). Especially noteworthy are
several new map forms that emerged solely or
largely during the twentieth century. Image
maps, rooted in the invention of the hot-air
balloon and photography in the eighteenth
and nineteenth centuries, became an import-
ant mapping technology with the development
of fixed-wing aircraft, helicopters and artificial
satellites, as well as customized cameras and
electronic scanners used in remote sensing
(Dahlberg, Luman and Vaupel, 1990). Also

known as photomaps, image maps have
become a valuable supplement to the conven-
tional topographic ‘line map’, so called
because features are inscribed by crisp sym-
bols rather than inferred from tonal contrast.
Although a single aerial photograph is a per-
spective view, with distances distorted locally
by variation in elevation, photogrammetry
allows the compilation of topographic maps
from overlapping aerial photographs as well
as the efficient generation of distortion-free,
‘orthorectified’ photomaps (as in Google
Earth: http://www.earth.google.com).
Electronic technology has radically altered
the appearance and usability of maps. Ani-
mated maps, first produced on film but now
generated by software, treat time as a scalable
entity and afford historical maps with two
scales, for example, ‘ten seconds represents
one year’ for time and ‘one inch represents
five miles’ for distance (Harrower, 2004).
Dynamic maps afford dramatic fly-by render-
ings of terrain or statistical surfaces, while
interactive topographic maps overcome
conventional treatments of scale and general-
ization by letting viewers zoom in or out.
Interactive maps that let users retrieve add-
itional information by clicking on or merely
rolling over a symbol can remove the inherent
uncertainty of categories on a choropleth map,
or promote a fuller understanding of an un-
familiar country or a local hazardous waste site
(seevisualization). Theinternetnot only
expedites the delivery of geographic informa-
tion, such as timely radar weather maps, but
also affords instant access to historic maps in
public archives and free, advertiser-supported
route maps with supplementary verbal direc-
tions. Societal impacts are especially apparent
in Web-baseddeliberative mapping, which
fosters negotiated solutions of planning or
political issues by multiple authors (Wiegand,
2002), and in a ‘cybercartography’ that
promises a wider exploitation of multi-sensor
formats, an unprecedented degree of integra-
tion and customized products, and inevi-
table challenges for designers, politicians
and scholars (Taylor, 2003). (See alsomap
reading.) mm

Suggested reading
Brewer (2005); Dorling and Fairbairn (1997);
MacEachren (1995); Monmonier (1993);
Peterson (2003); Southworth and Southworth
(1982).

map projection A geometric transformation
of the spherical world on to a flatmap. Map

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_M Final Proof page 437 1.4.2009 3:19pm

MAP PROJECTION
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