Here I am - this is me
There's no where else on earth I'd rather be
Here I am - it's just me and you
And tonight we make our dreams come true
It's a new world - it's a new start
It's alive with the beating of young hearts
It's a new day - it's a new plan
I've been waiting for you
Here I am
Here we are - we've just begun
And after all this time - our time has come
Ya here we are - still goin' strong
Right here in the place where we belong
Chorus X1
Here I am - this is me
There's no where else on earth I'd rather be
Here I am - it's just me and you
And tonight we make our dreams come true
Chorus X2
Here I am - next to you
And suddenly the world is all brand new
Here I am - where I'm gonna stay
Now there's nothin standin in our way
Here I am - this is me
Simple conical projection is a type of map projection where the Earth's surface is projected onto a cone that is tangent to the globe at a single point. This projection preserves true direction along the tangent point, making it useful for mapping small areas with low distortion near the center point. However, distortion increases as you move away from the tangent point.
Another name for an oval-shaped projection map is called a Robinson Projection Map because it was created by an American cartographer named Arthur Robinson.
Mercator projection distorts the size of land masses, resulting in high distortion near the poles. Equal area projections maintain accurate land area proportions, making them useful for representing data like population density.
The Robinson projection splits the Earth's oceans apart in order to more accurately represent the sizes and shapes of the continents. This projection is a compromise projection that tries to balance the accurate representation of both landmasses and oceans.
The center on an Arctic region polar projection map is typically the North Pole. This projection shows the Arctic region as if it were viewed from above the North Pole, with lines of longitude radiating out from the center.
On a Mercator projection map, north is typically represented as straight up toward the top of the map. However, it's important to note that the Mercator projection distorts the size and shape of landmasses as they get closer to the poles.
It is a conical projection of the earth used for aeronautical charts
Calyces
Conical
I watched the recent solar eclipse on a projection screen.
curry is the simple answer
Google Earth uses a Simple Cylindrical projection with a WGS84 datum for its imagery base.
a paper cone is placed on a globe like a hat, tangent to it at some parallel, and a point source of light at the center of the globe projects the surface features onto the cone.
conical is an adjectiveso, for example: "It had a conical shape"
Google Earth uses a Simple Cylindrical (Plate Carree) Projection with a WGS84 datum for its imagery base. Altitude is measured from the vertical datum (WGS84 EGM96 Geoid).This is a simple map projection where the meridians and parallels are equidistant, straight lines, with the two sets crossing at right angles. This projection is also known as Lat/Lon WGS84.
Because they have a high degree of accuracy for limited areas
Cylindrical , providing the cylinder axis is co-linear with the N/S polar axial line through the centre of the Earth.
It depends on the shape. Many prismatic or conical shapes have simple cross section - such as a polygon, a circle or an ellipse. These have simple, though different, formulae.