A cartogram is a map that substitutes a different measure for land area or distance. The map then is generally greatly distorted in order to convey the information using this alternate variable.
Some other types of maps include thematic maps which focus on specific themes such as population distribution or climate patterns, topographic maps that show elevation and terrain features, and cartogram maps that distort the size of regions based on a specific variable like population or economic data.
A cartogram map in which some thematic mapping variable is substituted for land area. The geometry or space of the map is distorted in order to convey the information of this alternate variable. There are two main types of cartograms: area and distance cartograms. An area cartogram is sometimes referred to as a value-by-area map or an isodemographic map, the latter particularly for a population cartogram, which illustrates the relative sizes of the populations of the countries of the world by scaling the area of each country in proportion to its population. The shape and relative location of each country is retained to as large an extent as possible, but inevitably a large amount of distortion results. A distance cartogram may also be called a central-point cartogram. This form is typically used to show relative travel times and directions from vertices in a network.
A cartogram map only shows things of interest. The maps are redrawn with the sizes of countries made bigger or smaller in order to represent whatever thing you are representing. Examples could be gross national product, rainfall, or anything else that one wants to portray. Cartograms are an easy way to compare relative figures at a glance.
A distorted map in which regions are drawn not to an areal scale but to some other scale such as population. Some cartograms attempt to retain the shape of the geographical region they represent; others, such as the rectangular cartogram illustrated opposite, use a single shape to represent all regions of equal importance.
A cartogram thematic map is a type of map that distorts geographic areas based on a particular thematic variable, such as population or economic data. This distortion allows for a more accurate representation of the data, making it easier to visually compare different regions.
A cartogram is a distored map which exaggerate or shrink some countries according to the information the creator of the map is trying to display.
Some other types of maps include thematic maps which focus on specific themes such as population distribution or climate patterns, topographic maps that show elevation and terrain features, and cartogram maps that distort the size of regions based on a specific variable like population or economic data.
That type of map is called a cartogram. It distorts the geographical boundaries of areas based on a certain variable, such as population size, to represent data more accurately.
A cartogram is a map in which the information is shown in the geographical distribution of a map. The cartogram shows statistical information graphically
A cartogram map in which some thematic mapping variable is substituted for land area. The geometry or space of the map is distorted in order to convey the information of this alternate variable. There are two main types of cartograms: area and distance cartograms. An area cartogram is sometimes referred to as a value-by-area map or an isodemographic map, the latter particularly for a population cartogram, which illustrates the relative sizes of the populations of the countries of the world by scaling the area of each country in proportion to its population. The shape and relative location of each country is retained to as large an extent as possible, but inevitably a large amount of distortion results. A distance cartogram may also be called a central-point cartogram. This form is typically used to show relative travel times and directions from vertices in a network.
A cartogram map only shows things of interest. The maps are redrawn with the sizes of countries made bigger or smaller in order to represent whatever thing you are representing. Examples could be gross national product, rainfall, or anything else that one wants to portray. Cartograms are an easy way to compare relative figures at a glance.
cartogram
A distorted map in which regions are drawn not to an areal scale but to some other scale such as population. Some cartograms attempt to retain the shape of the geographical region they represent; others, such as the rectangular cartogram illustrated opposite, use a single shape to represent all regions of equal importance.
They are maps.
http://starwarsbattlefront.filefront.com/ has some maps
they are a portion of all of the maps
I believe it is "cartogram".