It would show up smaller on a Mercator map projection
Madagascar is on the south end of Africa just above India.
because it has to be stretched to fit on the map. example, look at Greenland on a map and on a globe. are they the same size or not? NO. the globe is accurate and the map is wrong because it had to be stretched out the fit the flat rectangle. hope this helped
It is north of Greenland, off the coast of Cape Morris Jessup, the most northern poin on Greenland. If you're using Google Earth, then I recommend you use a placemark; it'a pretty small on the map.
Robinson's map is much more accurate. Mercator's is very out of proportion. If you notice, mercator's map shows Greenland larger than South America, when South America is actually the bigger of the two.
Greenland is in the North Atlantic Ocean, to the northeast of Canada.
Greenland and Antarctica.
mercator
Northwest is between North on a map and West on a map.
Greenland ranges in latitude from about 59.80° to 83.62° North, and in longitude from about 12.27° to 73.03° West.
It would show up smaller on a Mercator map projection
Usually not, since they're separate countries.
Geographers can use a projection method that minimizes distortion, such as the Lambert cylindrical equal-area projection. They can also represent Greenland in a non-standard orientation to better convey its true size and shape. Additionally, including a note or disclaimer explaining the limitations of the map's representation of Greenland can help mitigate misunderstandings.
72° 0′ 0″ N, 40° 0′ 0″ W
Newfoundland and Labrador, Greenland, and the Arctic ocean, in ascending order.
It's just below Greenland, a bit above the left side of The UK.
Madagascar is on the south end of Africa just above India.