Visualizing Environmental Science

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

468 Graphing Appendix


that because it is not clear without further explanation,
the y-axis title on this graph includes the measurement
unit (billions) portrayed along this axis.


À>«…Ê/Þ«iÃ


LEARNING OBJECTIVES


  1. Explain the difference between continuous and
    discrete data.

  2. Distinguish among the following types of graphs:
    line graph, bar graph, and pie chart.


S


cientists use different types of graphs to visual-
ize and interpret different kinds of data.
Continuous data can take on an infinite num-
ber of values within a given range, and are
usually associated with measurable variables such as tem-
perature or length. For example, there are an infinite
number of measureable temperatures between 45 and 46
degrees Centigrade and lengths between 45 and 46 meters
(45.12, 45.593, etc.). In contrast, discrete data may only as-
sume a finite number of distinct values, and are usually
associated with variables that are counted, such as the num-
ber of people within a given area or the number of trees in
the forest (you can’t count 45.12 people or 45.593 trees).
One of the most common graph types is a line graph
in which one or more lines connect a series of data points
together. Line graphs are used when the y-axis portrays
continuous numeric data and the x-axis portrays either
continuous numeric data or discrete categorical data
that form a sequential series such as months or years. For
example, the line graph below (Figure A.5) shows how
the number of Earths needed to absorb humanity’s eco-
logical footprint has increased over the past five decades.
Note that we can determine the time our collective foot-
print overshot Earth’s capacity by finding the point on
the x-axis that corresponds to the point at which this line
exceeds the 1.0 value on the y-axis (around 1988).
Year

1800 1900 2000

High 10.6

Medium 9.3

Low 8.1

2050

Human population (billions)

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

Measurement
unit

Future
projections

UN Population Division 2010.

Figure A.4



  1. What are data? What is a variable?

  2. Explain the difference between a dependent and an
    independent variable.

  3. Draw your own graph and include and label
    each of the following components: x-axis, y-axis,
    title, caption, legend, future projection, and the
    measurement units of the x- and y-axes.


1.0

Year

Number of planet Earths
0

0.5

1.5

2.0

1970 1980 1990 2000 2010

Global ecological
overshoot

Based on data from World Wildlife Fund,Living Planet Report, 2008.

ˆ}ÕÀiÊ°xÊUʈ˜iÊÀ>«…
Free download pdf