1. True direction (loxodromes are straight lines)
2. Local shapes
The Mercator projection map still is in use today because, although the sizes and distance were distorted, it still showed directions accurately.
It would show up smaller on a Mercator map projection
Mercator is not a map, but a map projection, i.e. a way of representing the continents on a map. The Mercator projection is only accurate between 30 degrees north and south latitude. The further away you go from that point, the greater the exaggeration.
Most maps will show latitude and longitude lines, if not, they're ALWAYS on a globe.
latitude and longitude are the same as the Mercator
None of them. However, the location is distorted the least.
because it shows the directions accurately
because it shows the directions accurately
The Mercator projection map still is in use today because, although the sizes and distance were distorted, it still showed directions accurately.
It would show up smaller on a Mercator map projection
Geardus Mercator invented the Mercator Map in 1569
It's the location. 'A projection is a system for mapping the round Earth on a flat surface. The Mercator projection map shows the accurate locations of the continents and oceans. The land and water areas, however, are greatly distorted toward the North and South Poles.'
Mercator projection is used on ships. It shows the correct shapes of continents but the areas are distorted. The longitude lines are parallel which makes the areas at the poles seem larger than they actually are. Hope this helps.
The Mercator map was created in 1569 by Gerardus Mercator. The projection's creator wanted to create a map that would be helpful in navigating the world's seas. The map is set up on a useful grid. However, the map is clearly distorted! At the north and south ends of the map, Antarctica and Greenland are just two examples of landforms that appear far bigger than they should. Areas and distances are not portrayed accurately on this map
Mercator is not a map, but a map projection, i.e. a way of representing the continents on a map. The Mercator projection is only accurate between 30 degrees north and south latitude. The further away you go from that point, the greater the exaggeration.
A equal-area map shows the "true" size of Australia.
Mercator projection what popular map in classrooms in the US is what kind of map?