Private residences, detailed building interiors, and secret military installations are examples of information that would likely not appear on a standard map.
Lines of latitude do not appear on all types of maps, The other parts do appear on most maps.
Animals, humans,everything except for land and water, unless u use google earth
The map that shows the most accurate relative size of Antarctica is the Peters Projection map. This map emphasizes area, making regions near the poles, like Antarctica, appear larger relative to their actual size on a traditional Mercator map, which distorts land masses near the poles. The white region on each map indicates the icy expanse of Antarctica, and the Peters Projection provides a more truthful representation of its true scale compared to other projections.
Horizon
Private residences, detailed building interiors, and secret military installations are examples of information that would likely not appear on a standard map.
Animals, humans,everything except for land and water, unless u use Google earth
Lines of latitude do not appear on all types of maps, The other parts do appear on most maps.
Satellites. They move, so they cannot be printed on a map. Additionally, "satellites" is the only option that physically exists; the other choices are concepts, not objects.
Remote sensors
Animals, humans,everything except for land and water, unless u use google earth
The map that shows the most accurate relative size of Antarctica is the Peters Projection map. This map emphasizes area, making regions near the poles, like Antarctica, appear larger relative to their actual size on a traditional Mercator map, which distorts land masses near the poles. The white region on each map indicates the icy expanse of Antarctica, and the Peters Projection provides a more truthful representation of its true scale compared to other projections.
Horizon
Meridians on a globe get closer and eventually merge at the North and South Poles. On a map (a flat plane) the meridians are drawn parallel and there is distortion at the poles, most noticeable on a world map.
The north and south poles may appear larger on a map due to the distortion caused by map projections. In reality, the poles are points where the Earth's axis intersects its surface and do not have physical size in the same way as countries or continents.
The type of map that exaggerates distances at the poles is called a cylindrical map projection, specifically the Mercator projection. In this projection, areas far from the equator, particularly near the poles, appear much larger than they actually are, leading to significant distortion in size and distance. This makes it useful for navigation but less accurate for representing the true size of landmasses.
physical map