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Geographic Toolbox Types of Geography – Physical Geography: • regards the natural environment, such as… – Human Geography: • regards the environment as it pertains to human uses such as… WHAT ALL MAPS NEED 1) Title 5) A border – The title should answer the questions: What? Where? 2) Legend When? – Water/City/Road/Mountains. Use a ruler to make a nice big box. Make smaller boxes for the symbols. 3) Scale – Explains how small the map is compared to the real world eg. 1cm represents 20 km 4) North Arrow – You may simply put an arrow with NORTH, or the full compass rose – Provide an outline border for each map. Use a ruler to place a box around the map, or be as decorative as you want!!! 6) Always shade the water BLUE – You do NOT always have to color the land. In fact in some cases maps look better without too much coloring on them!!! 7) YOUR NAME!!! – Always in the top right hand corner, just like all your other assignments. ****Map Making WS Map Projections Small Scale maps • Show a small amount of detail of a large area • Used for political maps, physical maps, world maps… – Examine figure 3.11 (page 60) – Examine figure 11.9 (page 195) Map Projections • Small Scale examples… Map Projections Large Scale maps • Show a great amount of detail about a small area • Used for residential planning, hiking maps… – Examine Figure 5 (page 6) Types of Projections • ALL map projects are distorted views of the earth’s surface!!! *A globe is the only accurate method to represent the earth because it is a sphere just like the earth • The Mercator Projection is one particular map which is very distorted – To make a flat map from a round globe, cartographers ‘unwrapped’ the globe and stretched the northern (and southern) regions to make them flat – All lines of latitude and longitude are seen as straight lines – Created by the British as accurate naval navigation charts Types of Projections Mercator cont. • The problem is that any northern nation then looks stretched and larger than it really is – i.e. Canada, Greenland, Europe look BIG, while Africa, South America and other equatorial regions look smaller Types of Projections • The Winkel Tripel (1998) projection attempts to correct the distortions seen on maps – Curved lines of latitude and longitude show less distortion in the size of the northern regions – Gives us a less ethnocentric view of the world An odd map??? Types of Maps General Purpose Maps • Provide many different types of information on one map – i.e. roads, hospitals, rivers, cities, forests… – Examine figure 11 (page 11) Thematic Maps • Provide information on one specific characteristic or topic – I.e. elevation, vegetation, population density… – Examine figure 16 (page 18), Figure 3.10 (page 59) » ***Types of Maps WS General Purpose Map • Ottawa Road map Thematic Map: Poverty Rates Compass Points and Bearings Compass points are used to show general direction • North is always identified on any map created • Cardinal Points: N, E, S, W • Ordinal Points: NNE, NE, ENE, ESE, SE… Compass Points and Bearings • Bearing Points are given in exact degrees measuring angles » ***Compass Points WS Grid Systems Alphanumeric Grids • ‘Uses letters and numbers to identify squares in a grid pattern’ • letters and numbers always refer to either a row or column of squares – i.e. A12, K5, Q18… – Examine figure 11 (page 11) » ***Alpha Numeric WS Grid Systems Military Grids • Use 6 digit numbers to identify specific locations on map grids • Numbers are used as ‘Eastings’ and ‘Northings’ to locate items on a map • Numbers refer to the grid lines that appear on the map • Always read towards the east first, then up towards the north (RRU) • Each grid number is also broken down into tenths – I.e. 834095 – ***Military Grid WS Latitude and Longitude • No matter where you are on the face of the earth, your location can be identified by your latitude and longitude coordinate (address) • Read the vertical axis N or S (latitude) first, then horizontal axis E or W (longitude) second Latitude and Longitude Latitude lines: measure how far north or south a place is • The equator is the starting point for all lines of latitude – All latitude lines run east-west around the globe – Ottawa is located 45 degrees north of the equator Latitude and Longitude Longitude lines: measure how far east or west a place is • The Prime Meridian is the starting point for all the lines of longitude – All longitude lines run north-south around the globe until they meet on the reverse side at 180 degrees – Ottawa is located 75 degrees west of the prime meridian • Examine figure 14 (page 16) • Ottawa is 45°N 75°W » ***Lat. Long WS S c a l e s Distance Scales Direct Statement Scale • Use words to describe the relationship between a distance on a map and a distance on the earth’s surface – I.e. ‘1cm to 10 km’ means every 1 cm you measure on the map is 10 km in real life – Examine figure 10 (page 10) Distance Scales Line Scale • Uses a bar or a line to show/ describe scale • Easiest to use – don’t even need a ruler! – Examine figure 11 (page 11) Distance Scales Representative Fraction Scale • Uses numbers in a ratio to explain scale • 1: 50 000 means 1cm on the map = 50 000 cm on the ground 1 : 100,000 the magic #!!! • 100,000cm in a km – Good because… they can be used by anyone in the world, using any unit of measure!!! – 1 : 1000 = small scale VS. 1 : 5,000,000 = large scale » ***Scale WS