Of course it distorts the oceans rather badly, but it does conserve land area. All map work should work against alternate projections and this one is particularly valuable. At least Europe compares nicely to India and the Indonesian archipelago compares to the USA as does Brazil and China.
The sub sea should also be mapped in in order to allow for lining up edges in the Atlantic and to check voids in the Pacific. The perimeter has been left out here.
That is picky though for an excellent piece of work..
More Accurate World Map Wins Prestigious Design Award
Published November 3, 2016
Updated August 23, 2018
https://allthatsinteresting.com/authagraph-world-map?
The AuthaGraph map is the most accurate map you'll ever see. You probably won't like it.
You probably don’t realize it, but virtually every world map you’ve
ever seen is wrong. And while the new AuthaGraph World Map may look
strange, it is in fact the most accurate map you’ve ever seen.
The world maps we’re all used to operate off of the Mercator
projection, a cartographic technique developed by Flemish geographer
Gerardus Mercator in 1569. This imperfect technique gave us a map that
was “right side up,” orderly, and useful for ship navigation — but also
one that distorted both the size of many landmasses and the distances
between them.
To correct these distortions, Tokyo-based architect and artist Hajime
Narukawa created the AuthaGraph map over the course of several years
using a complex process that essentially amounts to taking the globe
(more accurate than any Mercator map) and flattening it out:
Narukawa’s process indeed succeeded in creating a map that no longer
shrinks Africa, enlarges Antarctica, or minimizes the vastness of the
Pacific — and the list goes on.
In recognition of Narukawa’s success, he’s now beaten out thousands
of other contestants to receive this year’s Grand Award from Japan’s
Good Design Awards, and his map is featured in textbooks for Japanese
schoolchildren.
“AuthaGraph faithfully represents all oceans [and] continents,
including the neglected Antarctica,” according to the Good Design
Awards, and shows “an advanced precise perspective of our planet.”
Furthermore, according to Narukawa, his map means a lot more than
just a faithful cartographical representation of our planet. Because
Earth is now facing down issues like climate change and contentious
territorial sea claims, Narukawa believes that the planet needs to look
at itself in a new light — a view that perceives the interests of our
planet first and its countries second.
No comments:
Post a Comment