The Mercator projection map shows the Earth as if it were projected on a cylinder. then flattened out. This unfortunately males the physical aspects of the Earth stretch so that (for example) Greenland becomes a massive land mass.Other maps essentially are produced by essentially skinning a globe so the the pieces are similar to the peel of a sectioned orange or a disassembled soccer ball. These are polyhedral maps.
Pseudo conical maps attempt to combine these two types to keep the land masses in a better approximation of their actual sizes,
Azimuthal maps project the maps from theNnorth Pole outward.
The Robinson projection is a compromise projection that shows most of the Earth's landmasses and oceans with relatively accurate sizes and shapes, while minimizing distortion. It strikes a balance between preserving spatial relationships and minimizing distortion across the globe.
conic projection
conic projection
The cylindrical map projection, such as the Mercator projection, shows all latitude and longitude lines as parallel. However, this projection distorts the size of land masses the further they are from the equator.
The Mercator projection does that.
A polar projection of the earth shows a pole (north or south, depending on the projection) at the center of a circular map. The equator is the circumference of the circle.
conic projection
mercator projection
yes map projection shows true direction
A type of projection that usually shows the poles is the polar projection, which focuses on the Earth's polar regions. It is often used to study and analyze features near the North and South Poles.
mercator projection
mercator projection