Cartography (in
Greek chartis = map and
graphein = write) is the study and practice of making
geographical maps.
Combining science,
aesthetics, and
technique, cartography builds on the premise that reality can be
modeled in ways that communicate spatial information
effectively.
The fundamental problems of cartography are to:
- Set the map's agenda and select traits of the object to be
mapped. This is the concern of map editing. Traits may be physical,
such as roads or land masses, or may be abstract, such as toponyms or political boundaries.
- Represent the terrain of the mapped object on flat media. This
is the concern of map
projections.
- Eliminate characteristics of the mapped object that are not
relevant to the map's purpose. This is the concern of generalization.
- Reduce the complexity of the characteristics that will be
mapped. This is also the concern of generalization.
- Orchestrate the elements of the map to best convey its message
to its audience. This is the concern of map
design.
History

Copy (1475) of St. Isidore's TO map of
the world.
The earliest known map is a matter of some debate, both because the
definition of "map" is not sharp and because some artifacts
speculated to be maps might actually be something else.
A wall
painting, which may depict the ancient Anatolian city of Çatalhöyük
(previously known as Catal Huyuk or Çatal Hüyük),
has been dated to the late 7th
millennium BCE. Other known maps of the ancient world
include the
Minoan “House of the
Admiral” wall painting from c.
1600 BCE, showing a seaside community in an
oblique perspective and an engraved map of the holy Babylonian city of Nippur
, from the
Kassite period (14th 12th centuries BCE).
The
ancient Greeks and
Romans created maps, beginning at latest with
Anaximander in the 6th century BC. In
the
2nd century AD,
Ptolemy produced his
treatise on cartography,
Geographia. This contained
Ptolemy's world map - the world then
known to Western society
(Ecumene).
As early as the 700s, Arab scholars were translating the works of
the
Greek
geographers into Arabic.
In
ancient China, geographical
literature spans back to the 5th century BC. The oldest extant
Chinese maps come from the
State of Qin,
dated back to the 4th century BC, during the
Warring States Period.
In the book of the
Xin Yi Xiang Fa Yao, published in 1092 by the Chinese
scientist
Su Song, a star map
on the equidistant cylindrical projection. Although this
method of charting seems to have existed in China even prior to
this publication and scientist, the greatest significance of the
star maps by Su Song, is that they represent the oldest existent
star maps in
printed form.
Early forms of
cartography of
India included legendary paintings; maps of locations described
in Indian
epic poetry, for example, the
Ramayana. Indian cartographic
traditions also covered the locations of the
Pole star, and other constellations of use. These
charts may have been in use by the beginning of the
Common Era for purposes of navigation.
Mappa mundi is the general term used to
describe Medieval European maps of the world. Approximately 1,100
mappae mundi are known to have survived from the
Middle Ages. Of these, some 900 are found
illustrating manuscripts and the remainder exist as stand-alone
documents (Woodward, p. 286).
The
Arab geographer
Muhammad al-Idrisi produced his
medieval atlas
Tabula
Rogeriana in 1154.
He incorporated the knowledge of Africa, the Indian Ocean
and the Far East, gathered
by Arab merchants and
explorers with the information inherited from the classical
geographers to create the most accurate map of the world up until
his time. It remained the most accurate world map for the
next three centuries.
In the
Age of Exploration, from
the 15th century to the 17th century,
European cartographers both copied earlier maps (some
of which had been passed down for centuries) and drew their own
based on explorers' observations and new
surveying techniques. The invention of the
magnetic compass,
telescope and
sextant
enabled increasing accuracy. In 1492,
Martin Behaim, a German cartographer, made the
oldest extant globe of the Earth.
Johannes Werner refined and promoted
the
Werner map projection.
In 1507,
Martin
Waldseemüller produced a globular world map and a large
12-panel world wall map (
Universalis Cosmographia)
bearing the first use of the name "America".
Portuguese
cartographer, Diego
Ribero, was author of the first known planisphere with a
graduated Equator (1527). Italian
cartogapher
Battista Agnese produced at least 71
manuscript atlases of sea charts.
Due to the sheer physical difficulties inherent in cartography,
map-makers frequently lifted material from earlier works without
giving credit to the original cartographer. For example, one of the
most famous early maps of North America is unofficially known as
the "Beaver Map", published in 1715 by
Herman Moll. This map is an exact reproduction
of a 1698 work by
Nicolas de Fer. De
Fer in turn had copied images that were first printed in books by
Louis Hennepin, published in 1697,
and
François Du Creux, in
1664. By the 1700s, map-makers started to give credit to the
original engraver by printing the phrase "After [the original
cartographer]" on the work.
Technological changes
In cartography, technology has continually changed in order to meet
the demands of new generations of mapmakers and map users. The
first maps were manually constructed with brushes and parchment;
therefore, varied in quality and were limited in distribution. The
advent of magnetic devices, such as the
compass and much later,
magnetic storage devices, allowed for the
creation of far more accurate maps and the ability to store and
manipulate them digitally.
Advances in mechanical devices such as the
printing press,
quadrant and
vernier, allowed for the mass production of
maps and the ability to make accurate reproductions from more
accurate data. Optical technology, such as the
telescope,
sextant and
other devices that use telescopes, allowed for accurate surveying
of land and the ability of mapmakers and navigators to find their
latitude by measuring angles to the
North Star at night or the
sun at noon.
Advances in photochemical technology, such as the
lithographic and
photochemical processes, have allowed for the
creation of maps that have fine details, do not distort in shape
and resist moisture and wear. This also eliminated the need for
engraving, which further shortened the time it takes to make and
reproduce maps.
Advances in electronic technology in the 20th century ushered in
another revolution in cartography. Ready availability of
computers and peripherals such as
monitors, plotters, printers, scanners (remote and document) and
analytic stereo plotters, along with computer programs for
visualization, image processing, spatial analysis, and database
management, have democratized and greatly expanded the making of
maps. The ability to superimpose spatially located variables onto
existing maps created new uses for maps and new industries to
explore and exploit these potentials. See also:
digital raster graphic.
These days most commercial-quality maps are made using
software that falls into one of three main types:
CAD,
GIS and specialized
illustration
software. Spatial information
can be stored in a
database, from which it
can be extracted on demand. These tools lead to increasingly
dynamic, interactive
maps that can be
manipulated digitally.
Map types
General vs thematic cartography

Small section of an orienteering
map.
In understanding basic maps, the field of cartography can be
divided into two general categories: general cartography and
thematic cartography. General cartography involves those maps that
are constructed for a general audience and thus contain a variety
of features. General maps exhibit many reference and location
systems and often are produced in a series. For example, the
1:24,000 scale topographic maps of the
United States Geological
Survey (USGS) are a standard as compared to the 1:50,000 scale
Canadian maps.
The government of the UK produces the classic
1:63,360 (1 inch to 1 mile) "Ordnance Survey
" maps of the entire UK and with a range of
correlated larger- and smaller-scale maps of great
detail.
Thematic cartography involves maps of
specific geographic themes, oriented toward specific audiences. A
couple of examples might be a
dot
map showing corn production in Indiana or a shaded area map of
Ohio counties, divided into numerical
choropleth classes. As the volume of
geographic data has exploded over the last century, thematic
cartography has become increasingly useful and necessary to
interpret spatial, cultural and social data.
An
orienteering map combines both
general and thematic cartography, designed for a very specific user
community. The most prominent thematic element is shading, that
indicates degrees of difficulty of travel due to vegetation. The
vegetation itself is not identified, merely classified by the
difficulty ("fight") that it presents.
Topographic vs topological
A
topographic map is primarily
concerned with the
topographic
description of a place, including (especially in the 20th century)
the use of
contour lines showing
elevation.
Terrain or relief can be shown in
a variety of ways (see
Cartographic relief
depiction).
A
topological map is a very general
type of map, the kind you might sketch on a napkin. It often
disregards scale and detail in the interest of clarity of
communicating specific route or relational information. Beck's
London Underground map is an
iconic example. Though the most widely used map of "The Tube," it
preserves little of reality. It varies scale constantly and
abruptly, it straightens curved tracks, and it contorts directions
haphazardly. The only traits the map preserves are the order of the
stations and crossings along the tracks and whether a station or
crossing is north or south of the
River
Thames. Yet those are all a typical passenger wishes to know,
so the map fulfills its purpose.
Map design

Illustrated map.
Arthur H. Robinson, an American cartographer
influential in thematic cartography, stated that a map not properly
designed "will be a cartographic failure." He also claimed, when
considering all aspects of cartography, that "map design is perhaps
the most complex." Robinson codified the mapmaker's understanding
that a map must be designed foremost with consideration to the
audience and its needs.
From the very beginning of mapmaking, maps "have been made for some
particular purpose or set of purposes". The intent of the map
should be illustrated in a manner in which the percipient
acknowledges its purpose in a timely fashion. The term
percipient refers to the person receiving information and
was coined by Robinson. The principle of
figure-ground refers to this
notion of engaging the user by presenting a clear presentation,
leaving no confusion concerning the purpose of the map. This will
enhance the user’s experience and keep his attention. If the user
is unable to identify what is being demonstrated in a reasonable
fashion, the map may be regarded as useless.
Making a meaningful map is the ultimate goal.
Alan MacEachren explains that a well
designed map "is convincing because it implies authenticity" (1994,
pp. 9). An interesting map will no doubt engage a reader.
Information richness or a map that is multivariate shows
relationships within the map. Showing several variables allows
comparison, which adds to the meaningfulness of the map. This also
generates hypothesis and stimulates ideas and perhaps further
research. In order to convey the message of the map, the creator
must design it in a manner which will aid the reader in the overall
understanding of its purpose. The title of a map may provide the
"needed link" necessary for communicating that message, but the
overall design of the map fosters the manner in which the reader
interprets it (Monmonier, 1993, pp. 93).
In the 21st century it is possible to find a map of virtually
anything from the inner workings of the
human
body to the
virtual worlds of
cyberspace. Therefore there are now a
huge variety of different styles and types of map - for example,
one area which has evolved a specific and recognisable variation
are those used by
public transport
organisations to guide
passengers, namely
urban rail and metro maps,
many of which are loosely based on 45 degree angles as originally
perfected by
Harry Beck and
George Dow.
Naming conventions
Most maps use text to
label
places and for such things as a map title, legend and other
information. Maps are often made in specific languages, though
names of places 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 word that describes a place, using a
non-native terminology or language is referred to as an
exonym.
In some cases the proper name is not clear.
For example, the
nation of Burma officially changed its name to Myanmar
, but many
nations do not recognize the ruling junta and continue to use
Burma. Sometimes an official name change is
resisted in other languages and the older name may remain in common
use.
Examples include the use of Saigon
for Ho Chi Minh
City
, Bangkok for Krung Thep
and Ivory Coast for Côte
d'Ivoire
.
Difficulties arise, when
transliteration or
transcription between
writing systems is required. National names
tend to have well established names in other languages and writing
systems, such as
Russia for Росси́я, but for many
placenames a system of transliteration or transcription is
required. In transliteration, the symbols of one language are
represented by symbols in another. For example, the
Cyrillic letter
Р is
traditionally written as
R in the
Latin alphabet. Systems exist for
transliteration of
Arabic, but the
results may vary.
For example, the Yemeni city of Mocha
is written variously in English as Mocha, Al Mukha,
al-Mukhā, Mocca and Moka. Transliteration systems are based
on relating written symbols to one another, while transcription is
the attempt to spell in one language the phonetic sounds of
another. Chinese writing is transformed into the Latin alphabet
through the
Pinyin phonetic transcription
systems. Other systems were used in the past, such as
Wade-Giles, resulting in the city being spelled
Beijing on newer English maps and
Peking on older
ones.
Further difficulties arise when countries, especially former
colonies, do not have a strong national geographic naming standard.
In such cases, cartographers may have to choose between various
phonetic spellings of local names versus older imposed, sometimes
resented, colonial names. Some countries have multiple official
languages, resulting in multiple official placenames. For example,
the capital of Belgium is both
Brussels and
Bruxelles. In Canada, English and French are official
languages and places have names in both languages.
British
Columbia
is also officially named la
Colombie-Britannique. English maps rarely show the
French names outside of Quebec, which itself is spelled
Québec in French.
The study of placenames is called
toponymy,
while that of the origin and historical usage of placenames as
words is
etymology.
Map symbology
The quality of a map’s design affects its reader’s ability to
extract information and to learn from the map. Cartographic
symbology has been developed in an effort
to portray the world accurately and effectively convey information
to the map reader. A legend explains the pictorial language of the
map, known as its symbology. The title indicates the region the map
portrays; the map image portrays the region and so on. Although
every map element serves some purpose, convention only dictates
inclusion of some elements, while others are considered optional. A
menu of map elements includes the neatline (border),
compass rose or north arrow, overview map,
scale bar,
projection and information
about the map sources, accuracy and publication.
When examining a landscape, scale can be intuited from trees,
houses and cars. Not so with a map. Even such a simple thing as a
north arrow is crucial. It may seem obvious that the top of a map
should point north, but this might not be the case.
Color, likewise, is equally important. How the cartographer
displays the data in different hues can greatly affect the
understanding or feel of the map. Different intensities of hue
portray different objectives the cartographer is attempting to get
across to the audience. Today, personal computers can display up to
16 million distinct colors at a time, even though the human eye can
distinguish only a minimum number of these (Jeer, 1997). This fact
allows for a multitude of color options for even for the most
demanding maps. Moreover, computers can easily hatch patterns in
colors to give even more options. This is very beneficial, when
symbolizing data in categories such as quintile and equal interval
classifications.
Quantitative symbols give a visual measure of the relative
size/importance/number that a symbol represents and to symbolize
this data on a map, there are two major classes of symbols used for
portraying quantitative properties. Proportional symbols change
their visual weight according to a quantitative property. These are
appropriate for extensive statistics.
Choropleth maps portray data collection
areas, such as counties or census tracts, with color. Using color
this way, the darkness and intensity (or value) of the color is
evaluated by the eye as a measure of intensity or concentration
(Harvard Graduate School of Design, 2005).
Map generalization
A good map has to provide a compromise between portraying the items
of interest (or
themes) in the
right place for the map
scale
used, against the need to annotate that item with text or a symbol,
which takes up space on the map medium and very likely will cause
some other item of interest to be displaced. The cartographer is
thus constantly making judgements about what to include, what to
leave out and what to show in a
slightly incorrect place -
because of the demands of the annotation. This issue assumes more
importance as the scale of the map gets smaller (i.e the map shows
a larger area), because relatively, the annotation on the map takes
up more space
on the ground.
A good example from
the late 1980s was the Ordnance Survey
's first digital maps, where the absolute
positions of major roads shown at scales of 1:1250 and 1:2500 were
sometimes a scale distance of hundreds of metres away from ground truth, when shown on digital maps at
scales of 1:250000 and 1:625000, because of the overriding need to
annotate the features.
See also
References
- [1] "A Tale of two obsessed archeologists, one
ancient city, and nagging doubts about whether science can ever
hope to reveal the past" by Robert Kunzig. Discover Magazine, May
1999.
- [2] "A bird’s eye view - of a leopard’s spots.
The Çatalhöyük ‘map’ and the development of cartographic
representation in prehistory" by Stephanie Meece. Anatolian
Studies, 56:1-16, 2006.
- http://www-oi.uchicago.edu/OI/PROJ/NIP/PUB93/NSC/NSCFIG7.html
The Nippur Expedition
- J. L. Berggren, Alexander Jones; Ptolemy's Geography By
Ptolemy, Princeton University Press, 2001 ISBN 0691092591
- Miyajima, Kazuhiko (1997). Projection Methods in Chinese,
Korean and Japanese Star Maps from "Highlights of Astronomy"
vol. 11B p. 714. Ed. J. Andersen. Norwell: Kluwer Academic
Publishers.
- Needham, Volume 4, Part 3, 569.
- Sircar 327
- Sircar 330
- S. P. Scott (1904), History of the Moorish Empire, pp.
461-2.
- Globes and Terrain Models -- Geography and Maps: An
Illustrated Guide, Library of Congress
- "Map Imitation" in Detecting the Truth: Fakes, Forgeries and
Trickery, a virtual museum exhibition at Library and Archives
Canada
- Devlin, Keith. The Millennium Problems. New York, New
York: Basic Books, 2002. Pages 162-163.
- This section based on:
Further reading
- Belyea, B. 1992. Amerindian Maps: the Explorer as Translator.
Journal of Historical Geography 18, no.3 :267-277.
- Bender, B. 1999. Subverting the Western Gaze: mapping
alternative worlds. In The Archaeology and Anthropology of
Landscape: Shaping your landscape (eds) P.J. Ucko & R. Layton.
London: Routledge.
- Crawford, P.V. 1973. The perception of graduated squares as
cartographic symbols. Cartographic Journal 10,
no.2:85-88.
- ESRI. 2004. ESRI Cartography: Capabilities and Trends.
Redlands, CA. White Paper
- Harvard Graduate School of Design, 2005.
http://www.gsd.harvard.edu/gis/manual/style/index.htm
- Jeer, S. 1997. Traditional Color Coding for Land Uses.
American Planning Association. pp. 4–5
- Kent, A.J. 2005. "Aesthetics: A Lost Cause in Cartographic
Theory?" The Cartographic Journal 42(2) pp.182–188
- Imus, D. and Dunlavey, P. 2002. Back to the Drawing Board:
Cartography vs the Digital Workflow. MT. Hood, Oregon.
- Oliver, J. 2007. The Paradox of Progress: Land Survey and the
Making of Agrarian Society in Colonial British Columbia. In
Contemporary and Historical Archaeology in Theory (eds) L.
McAtackney, M. Palus & A. Piccini, pp. 31–38. Oxford: BAR,
International Series 1677
- Olson, Judy M. 1975. Experience and the improvement of
cartographic communication. Cartographic Journal 12, no.
2:94-108
- Phillips, R., De Lucia, A., and Skelton, A. 1975. Some
Objective Tests of the Legibility of Relief Maps. The
Cartographic Journal. 12, pp. 39–46
- Phillips, R. 1980. A Comparison of Color and Visual Texture as
Codes for use as Area Symbols on Relief Maps. Ergonomics.
23, pp. 1117–1128.
- Rice, M., Jacobson, R., Jones. D. 2003. Object Size
Discrimination and Non-visual Cartographic Symbolization. CA.
pp. 1–12.
- "Map Imitations" in Detecting the Truth: Fakes, Forgeries and Trickery, a
virtual museum exhibition at Library and Archives Canada
- Wood, Denis, The Power of Maps, New York/London, The
Guilford Press, 1992
External links
- Cartography
and Geographic Information Society (CaGIS), USA The
CaGIS(ociety)promotes research, education, and practice to improve
the understanding, creation, analysis, and use of maps and
geographic information. The society serves as a forum for the
exchange of original concepts, techniques, approaches, and
experiences by those who design, implement, and use cartography,
geographical information systems, and related geospatial
technologies.
- National
Cartographic Center of Iran (NCC), Tehran
- British Cartographic Society
- Mapping History - a learning resource from the
British Library
- Geography and Maps, an Illustrated Guide, by the staff
of the US Library of
Congress
.
- The history of cartography at the School of
Mathematics and Statistics, University of St. Andrews,
Scotland
- Antique Maps by Carl Moreland and David Bannister -
complete text of the book, with information both on mapmaking and
on mapmakers, including short biographies of many
cartographers
- North American
Cartographic Information Society
- Society of
Cartographerssupports the practising cartographer and
encourages and maintains a high standard of cartographic
illustration
- Concise Bibliography of the History of
Cartography, Newberry Library
- UPCT :
project aimed at creating a world map (a French map to begin) with
voluntaries using GPS
- OpenStreetMap : project aimed squarely at creating and
providing free geographic data such as street maps to anyone who
wants them.
- GITTA - A
webbased open content eLearning course with basic and intermediate
cartography lessons based on the eLML XML
framework.
- cartographers
on the net SVG, scalable vector graphics: tutorials, examples,
widgets and libraries
See
Maps for more links to
modern and historical maps; however, most of the largest sites are
listed at the sites linked below.