Robinson projection is a map projection of a world map, which shows the entire world at once.
The Robinson Projection is accurate in shape and size
it is often used because it gives a fairer and more accurate picture of the shapes and sizes of the continents
Robinson projection
Mercator Projection, Interrupted Projection, Robinson Projection
The Robinson projection shows the entire world map at once.
pacific ocean
Discounting the Mercator, which cartographers tend to HATE but is ubiquitous anyway... Probably the Lambert Conformal Conic projection, or the Lambert Azimuthal Equal-Area projection (used by the US National Atlas).
because the robinson projection is more stronger and has more people than the mercator projection. this is also the right answer to. you see i grew up in a small town where yopu have to be right about everything.
because the robinson projection is more stronger and has more people than the mercator projection. this is also the right answer to. you see i grew up in a small town where yopu have to be right about everything.
Robinson projection
what similarity about the mercator projection and the robinson projection?
Mercator Projection, Interrupted Projection, Robinson Projection
Robinson created it.
Robinson Projection because it has minor distortions, the sizes and shapes near the eastern and western edges of the map are accurate, and outlines of the continents appear much as they do on the globe.
no
The Robinson projection and the Mercator projection.
the Robinson projection
Well because the Mercator project is made to stretch out so Greenland stretches out and it bigger on the Robinson projection and this is the wrong answer have a good day folks lol jk this is the right answer ppl
The three main types of map projections are cylindrical, conic, and azimuthal. Cylindrical projections show the Earth's surface on a cylinder, conic projections project the Earth's surface onto a cone, and azimuthal projections project the Earth's surface onto a plane. Each type has variations that can result in different map distortions.