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).
A map that accurately depicts the true shapes of continents is called an equal-area map, such as the Mollweide or Goode's Homolosine projections. These projections aim to minimize distortion in area, allowing for a more accurate representation of continents relative to each other.
Mapmakers use map projections to represent the surface of the Earth in two dimensions. Since the Earth is a 3D shape, it is impossible to show its entire surface on a flat map without distorting some aspects. Map projections help minimize these distortions and allow us to navigate and understand geographic information more effectively.
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.
False. The Robinson projection is a compromise map projection that tries to show the size and shape of the continents more accurately than some other projections, but it still distorts both. Water areas are not intentionally expanded to fill extra space on a Robinson projection.
The map that first showed the New World as new continents was drawn by German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller in 1507. This map, known as the Waldseemüller map, named the new continents "America" in honor of the explorer Amerigo Vespucci.
A map that accurately depicts the true shapes of continents is called an equal-area map, such as the Mollweide or Goode's Homolosine projections. These projections aim to minimize distortion in area, allowing for a more accurate representation of continents relative to each other.
Distortion
All map projections distort the surface in some fashion. Depending on the purpose of the map, some distortions are acceptable and others are not; therefore different map projections exist in order to preserve some properties of the sphere-like body at the expense of other properties. There is no limit to the number of possible map projections.
the map projection was high intolleranse to my speech
The Robinson projection is commonly used to minimize distortion of continents on a world map. It achieves this by balancing the size and shape of landmasses while slightly distorting both.
Map Projections - 1977 was released on: USA: 1977
=The curved surface of the earth cannot be shown accurately on a map because such a surface must be stretched or broken in some places as it is flattened. For this reason mapmakers use map projections.=
The most accurate way to show Earth's continents is using a map projection that minimizes distortions, such as the Winkel Tripel projection or the Robinson projection. These projections aim to balance shape, area, distance, and direction, providing a more accurate representation of the continents compared to other types of projections.
distortion
The most common map projections are based on three main geometric shapes: 1) Sphere to a Plane 2) Cylindrical Projections, 3) Conic Projections.
Map makers are called cartographers. There are 3 generally accepted types of map projections. These are cylindrical projections, conic projects and planar projections.
A map projection is a flat representation of the Earth's global surface. There are for different types of projections-- those that focus on distance, those that focus on direction, those that focus on area, and those that focus on shape. Conformal map projections are the type that show the correct size of continents but distort area size.