When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Campaign Cartographer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Campaign_Cartographer

    In the September 1994 edition of Dragon (Issue 209), Lester W. Smith found Campaign Cartographer almost too good, and the 334-page manual almost too much, saying "For those who like to invest multiple hours into creating detailed maps for their campaigns, and who have the hardware to take advantage of the program, the Campaign Cartographer software allows them to create, store, modify, and ...

  3. Map seed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Map_seed

    In video games using procedural world generation, the map seed is a (relatively) short number or text string which is used to procedurally create the game world ("map"). "). This means that while the seed-unique generated map may be many megabytes in size (often generated incrementally and virtually unlimited in potential size), it is possible to reset to the unmodified map, or the unmodified ...

  4. Cartographer (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartographer_(disambiguation)

    A cartographer is a person who deals with the art, science and technology of making and using maps. Cartographer may also refer to: geography, album by E.S. Posthumus; The Cartographer, extended play by The Republic of Wolves; Cartographers (board game), a board game designed by Jordy Adan

  5. Gerardus Mercator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerardus_Mercator

    Gerardus Mercator (/ dʒ ɪ ˈ r ɑːr d ə s m ɜːr ˈ k eɪ t ər /; [a] [b] [c] 5 March 1512 – 2 December 1594) [d] was a Flemish geographer, cosmographer and cartographer.He is most renowned for creating the 1569 world map based on a new projection which represented sailing courses of constant bearing (rhumb lines) as straight lines—an innovation that is still employed in nautical charts.

  6. John Speed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Speed

    John Speed (1551 or 1552 – 28 July 1629) was an English cartographer, chronologer and historian of Cheshire origins. [1] The son of a citizen and Merchant Taylor in London, [2] he rose from his family occupation to accept the task of drawing together and revising the histories, topographies and maps of the Kingdoms of Great Britain as an exposition of the union of their monarchies in the ...

  7. Cartography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartography

    Portuguese cartographer Diogo Ribero was the author of the first known planisphere with a graduated Equator (1527). Italian cartographer Battista Agnese produced at least 71 manuscript atlases of sea charts. Johannes Werner refined and promoted the Werner projection. This was an equal-area, heart-shaped world map projection (generally called a ...

  8. Ralph Agas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_Agas

    Ralph Agas (or Radulph Agas) (c. 1540 – 26 November 1621) was an English land surveyor and cartographer. He was born at Stoke-by-Nayland, Suffolk, in about 1540, and lived there throughout his life, although he travelled regularly to London. He began to practise as a surveyor in about 1566, and has been described as "one of the leaders of the ...

  9. Early world maps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_world_maps

    The cartographer is slightly confused by Iceland, depicting it both by a version of its classical name 'Thule', north-west of Britain, and as 'Island', logically linked with Scandinavia. An open-access high-resolution digital image of the map with place and name annotations is included among the thirteen medieval maps of the world edited in the ...