Posts Tagged: ‘maps’
Good question – Can a map change our perception of the world?
by Marshall Brain | April 12, 2011
We have been looking at the map of the world all our lives – in text books, atlases, dictionaries, etc. – and it seems simple enough. But it isn’t, as explained in this dramatization comparing the Mercator projection with the Gall-Peters projection: This page summarizes the history: The Peters Projection World Map is one of [...]
Have you ever wanted to see every volcanic eruption, every major earthquake, every tropical storm happening on earth, all at once, in real time? This animated map can help: Alertmap It shows: Current emergencies Short-time events Long-time or rolling events Mass die-offs Tsunami information Earthquake events Active tropical storm systems Geomagnetic storm monitoring Supervolcano Monitoring [...]
Google Maps and Google Buzz: Using Google for Fun and Profit
by Josh Clark | November 4, 2010
Being a Gmail user, I got an alert from Google yesterday letting me know that if I wanted to start my own gravy train against the company for their ill-fated Buzz social media all-in-one platform, I better sever myself before December 6 or else, as a Gmail user, I’ll be included in a class action settlement the company’s reached.
The Surprisingly Interesting World of Strange Maps
by Josh Clark | June 29, 2010
Encoding the location of a person, place or thing in the form of a map emerged as a useful tool of humanity early on. Early maps begin to appear in the historical record in Mesopotamia around 4,400 years back in the form of clay tablets, baked in the sun. One imagines that much earlier maps took the form of temporary line drawings in the sand or dirt, made with a handy stick. Here’s where the bison moved to; there’s water here, please go get some; there are some people with some nice leather vests beyond this hill. Let’s attack them; the spirits inhabit this plain so you’ll probably want to shy away from this area here.
Blaise Aguera y Arcas first created a stir in 2007 when he introduced Photosynth at TED: Blaise Aguera y Arcas: Photosynth demo This year he demonstrated a new way to think about maps. The demo includes live video inside a map: There comes a point where this really has nothing to do with maps. When [...]
My favorite subscription in the combined Dowdey arsenal of periodicals is far and away National Geographic. September’s issue featured an especially striking cover — the kind that made me flip right to the feature article. It’s a split image of Manhattan, one side grey with the familiar skyline, the other green as any unexplored wilderness.
And this wasn’t mere guesswork. Someone actually dug deep enough below the borough’s foundations to discover landscapes of swamps, beavers and old-growth hickories.
Ten years ago, Eric Sanderson, an ecologist at the Wildlife Conservation Society, bought a coffee table book of old New York maps. He was struck especially by the “British Headquarters Map,” a detailed record of the city’s streams, swamps, orchards and farmhouses from 1782 or 1783. After realizing some of the map’s features still existed, he decided to see how well the locations meshed with the city’s current layout.
Remote Spots on Earth Not So Remote After All
by Charles W. Bryant | April 21, 2009
Thanks to HowStuffWorks.com head writer Tracy for sending me this cool article on just how remote some areas of Planet Earth are these days.
Researchers at the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre in Ispra, Italy, and the World Bank have drawn up a “map of connectedness.” Despite the fact that many of you more adventurous types may have traveled to the far ends of the earth, you probably weren’t as far away from a city as you thought.
What the researchers set out to determine was how long it would take to travel to a city of at least 50,000 people from any point on earth, by land or sea. They took things like terrain, roads and river networks into consideration to figure this out. The results surprised me – less than 10 percent of the earth’s land is more than 48 hours from a city.
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