The Mercator projection is commonly used in navigation because it preserves straight lines, which facilitates course plotting. It is also widely used for world maps in education and cultural contexts due to its familiarity and the way it emphasizes high-latitude countries.
no
CylindricalWrap a piece of paper around the earth toform a cylinder that touches the equater allthe way around the earth. Shine a light fromthe center of the earth, trace the image that isprojected onto the paper, and then take thepaper off for a cylindrical projection.............. i don't know if that's what your looking for?good luck!....sorry
The difference between Mercator's and Peter's projection is that Mercator's projection blew up the size of powerful nations as size = power, in addition to this Mercator's projection allowed cartographers to produce charts from which sailors could navigate because his projection preserved shape and direction. IN contrast Peter did not really care about navigation, but rather restoring weaker, less powerful nations to their rightful size. The only problem with this was that sailors couldn't use Peter's projection for navigation, and his projection bought up a lot of controversy between educational and religious borders - some schools used Mercator's and some schools used Peter's/ some nations rejected peters projection and some nations accepted Peter's projection, etc.
Distortion is especially severe on maps that use the Mercator projection, such as world maps. This projection distorts the size and shape of landmasses, particularly near the poles.
Cartographers an represent the spherical Earth on flat paper by making a projection, which is like casting shadows from the spherical world onto a flat piece of paper.
Cartographers use a projection method to show the round Earth on a flat surface. Different types of map projections, such as Mercator or Robinson, are used to represent the Earth's curved surface in two dimensions while minimizing distortion of shape, area, distance, or direction.
Cartographers create maps that define borders, depict geographical features, and illustrate spatial relationships. Their work influences how people perceive and navigate the world, shaping cultural understanding and contributing to decisions on development, conservation, and infrastructure. Through their maps, cartographers play a critical role in shaping our interactions with the environment.
Invention of the compass and magnetic needle for navigation First printed map by Martin Waldseemüller naming the New World "America" Establishment of the Mercator projection for navigational purposes Creation of the first globe by Martin Behaim in the early 16th century
It is a drawing of the earth on a flat surface
Countries and places are "discovered" maps are made by cartographers, not discovered.
The Mercator projection is commonly used in navigation because it preserves straight lines, which facilitates course plotting. It is also widely used for world maps in education and cultural contexts due to its familiarity and the way it emphasizes high-latitude countries.
Goode's Interrupted Projection
World mission agencies and international aid agencies use the Peter's projection.
Robinson projection is a map projection of a world map, which shows the entire world at once.
orthographic projection
no