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  2. Thematic map - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thematic_map

    The most common purpose of a thematic map is to portray the geographic distribution of one or more phenomena. Sometimes this distribution is already familiar to the cartographer, who wants to communicate it to an audience, while at other times the map is created to discover previously unknown patterns (as a form of Geovisualization). [17]

  3. Map layout - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Map_layout

    The detailed scale bar in two measurement systems facilitates precise distance measurements by an international audience, which may or may not be the intent. Map layout, also called map composition or (cartographic) page layout, is the part of cartographic design that involves assembling various map elements on a page. This may include the map ...

  4. Cartographic generalization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartographic_generalization

    One could conceive of a map being quantified by its map information density, the average number of "bits" of information per unit area on the map (or its corollary, information resolution, the average distance between bits), and by its ground information density or resolution, the same measures per unit area on the Earth. Scale would thus be ...

  5. Cartogram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartogram

    A cartogram (also called a value-area map or an anamorphic map, the latter common among German-speakers) is a thematic map of a set of features (countries, provinces, etc.), in which their geographic size is altered to be directly proportional to a selected variable, such as travel time, population, or gross national income. Geographic space ...

  6. Map projection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Map_projection

    A map cannot achieve that property for any area, no matter how small. It can, however, achieve constant scale along specific lines. Some possible properties are: The scale depends on location, but not on direction. This is equivalent to preservation of angles, the defining characteristic of a conformal map.

  7. Cartographic design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartographic_design

    Although maps are often made in one specific language, place names often differ between languages. So a map made in English may use the name Germany for that country, while a German map would use Deutschland and a French map Allemagne. A non-native term for a place is referred to as an exonym. Sometimes a name may be disputed, such as Myanmar ...

  8. Map series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Map_series

    Mairie de Loevenich (), from the Topographic Survey of the Rhineland by Tranchot/Müffling, sheet 57 (published 1806/07).. A map series is a group of topographic or thematic charts or maps usually having the same scale and cartographic specifications, and with each sheet appropriately identified by its publisher as belonging to the same series.

  9. Robinson projection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robinson_projection

    Robinson projection of the world The Robinson projection with Tissot's indicatrix of deformation Map of the world created by the Central Intelligence Agency, with standard parallels 38°N and 38°S. The Robinson projection is a map projection of a world map that shows the entire world at once. It was specifically created in an attempt to find a ...