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Is the north always straight toward the top of the Mercator projection?

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.


Which map projection puts a map of the earth on to a flat piece of paper and is used by nearly all deep sea navigators?

All map projections put the earth's surface on to a flat sheet, in different ways. For navigation the Mercator projection is very common because a line on a constant compass bearing is shown as a straight line in this projection. Mercator is an example of a conformal projection because the shape of a small feature - like an island - is preserved on the map. Other projections preserve area or direction, but no projection can achieve everything, it's always a compromise.


What problem limits unusefulness of globes?

The main limitations of globes include their lack of detailed information, updates, and real-time data. They may not always accurately represent current geopolitical boundaries, demographic information, or environmental changes. Additionally, globes are not easily portable and can be bulky compared to digital maps.


What is a Peterson projection map?

The "Peterson Projection Map" is a projection of the physical traits of Earth's continents that is not altered by the spherical distortion of a globe. Most maps in text books and classrooms are Globe projections which are laid flat and "forced" into a rectangular format (shape). The result of this process is that the image of the continents in the northern and southern hemispheres are elongated by the stretching effect of forcing a spherical projection into a rectangular image. Meanwhile, the continents that brace the equator are "squished", for lack of a better term, into a projection that falsifies the true size of a particular land mass.Examples of the sphere-to-rectangle transition include Greenland appearing as large as Africa, Europe and North America seem larger then India, while Australia stretches into the distance. In reality, North America & China are almost identical in size, Europe is more like a sub-continent of Asia and Africa & India dwarf nearly all other continents in size.The common argument for the creation and use of the "Peterson" map is that it would help school children throughout the world to understand the true nature and size of our world and it's continents. Also that the enlarged and elongated images only helps to symbolically enforce a Geo-Political sense of supremacy, as it wrongly shows the nations of Western Civilization to be larger than they actually are as well as to always produce them in the middle of the distorted map.-J. Gordon, Missoula, MT.


What happen to the continents on some map projections?

Four things can happen in any map projection, and one of them always occurs, due to the issue of putting a 3-dimensional plan on a flat surface. Size, shape, direction, and distance can be distorted on any map. Mercator is the most obvious of these, and several changes the size of Siberia, making it appear huge as compared to anywhere else. In fact, Siberia isn't THAT big, but the projection makes for great propoganda purposes...either making the U.S.S.R. in the old days look like an overpowering juggernaught, or by making the United States look puny in comparison. In all reality, the United States had more people, a stronger economy, and better technology, and the U.S.S.R.'s only advantage was in their nuclear stockpile. The Robinson projection screws up distance and direction on the outermost region, while preserving the center almost as it is on the globe. The basic idea of all of this is that if you take a piece of paper and try to conform it to a globe, shining a light in the center of the globe to imprint the picture onto the paper, the image that results will always be distorted in one way or another. If you're studying geography, maps are nice, but nothing beats a globe (except, of course, in compactness and transportability).

Related Questions

Is north always straight toward the top of the Mercator projection?

no


Is the north always straight toward the top of the Mercator projection?

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.


Which map projection puts a map of the earth on to a flat piece of paper and is used by nearly all deep sea navigators?

All map projections put the earth's surface on to a flat sheet, in different ways. For navigation the Mercator projection is very common because a line on a constant compass bearing is shown as a straight line in this projection. Mercator is an example of a conformal projection because the shape of a small feature - like an island - is preserved on the map. Other projections preserve area or direction, but no projection can achieve everything, it's always a compromise.


What map has parallel lines of latitude and longitude?

A map with parallel lines of latitude and longitude is known as a Mercator projection map. This type of map is often used for navigation purposes due to its representation of straight lines of latitude and longitude, making it easier to measure distances and plot courses. However, the Mercator projection distorts the size of landmasses, especially near the poles.


Is north always straight on the eckert projection?

No, on the Eckert projection, north is not always represented as being straight. The Eckert projection is an equal-area map projection that distorts shape and direction in order to preserve area. This means that while areas are accurate, angles and shapes are distorted, including the direction of north.


What are lines are always the same distance apart?

parallel lines because they are perfectly straight towards the other


What is the angle used in isometric projection?

always 30 degrees


Why do flights from London to the US west coast always fly due north over the top of Scotland - not due west over Ireland?

Maps are flat, while the surface of the Earth is a sphere. Because aviation fuel is expensive, we generally try to fly in the most direct route possible, which is a "straight line" over the surface of the spherical Earth. If we plot this on a Mercator projection map, this "straight on the sphere" line becomes a "Great Circle" route on the flat map. From London to San Francisco, that "straight on the sphere" line goes north over Scotland and over the Arctic Ocean before coming south through northern Canada and down to SFO.


Why do straight men become seduced by other men?

Because human sexuality isn't always black and white. With a lot of people it is more towards grey.


What does a polygon always have?

It always has straight sides.


What is the purpose necessity use of projection?

The Earth is a sphere. Maps are almost always flat. The method you decide to use in order to represent the highlights of a curved surface on a flat drawing is called the 'projection'.


When the earth is towards the sun?

Half of the Earth is always towards the Sun.