its a flat surface trust me I know it says in the book:)
Map projections are mainly derived by mathematical formulas that project the Earth's three-dimensional surface onto a two-dimensional plane. These formulas determine how geographic features like shape, scale, distance, and direction are distorted on the map. Different projections are suited for different purposes depending on the type of distortion that is most acceptable for a particular map.
A flat map is distorted at the poles. Map projections allow us bring the world from 3d to 2d and see it from different perspectives, depending on what characteristics you want to preserve (i.e. distance, area, shape, and proximity). If you want a more accurate representation of the north pole you might use a planar projection, rather than a cylindrical projection. The only true representation of distance, area, shape, and proximity is a globe and those aren't very easy to fold up and put in our pockets are they?
Polar maps distort the size and shape of landmasses as they move away from the poles towards the equator. This distortion occurs because the map projection used to create a polar map cannot accurately represent the three-dimensional Earth on a two-dimensional surface. The closer you get to the pole on a polar map, the less distortion there typically is.
Map projections are created by mathematically transforming the curved surface of the Earth onto a flat plane. This process involves distorting certain aspects of the map, such as shapes, areas, distances, or directions, to create a 2D representation of the Earth's surface. Different map projections serve different purposes, and each comes with its own set of distortions.
Its called a projection map
Map projections are mainly derived by mathematical formulas that project the Earth's three-dimensional surface onto a two-dimensional plane. These formulas determine how geographic features like shape, scale, distance, and direction are distorted on the map. Different projections are suited for different purposes depending on the type of distortion that is most acceptable for a particular map.
A flat map is distorted at the poles. Map projections allow us bring the world from 3d to 2d and see it from different perspectives, depending on what characteristics you want to preserve (i.e. distance, area, shape, and proximity). If you want a more accurate representation of the north pole you might use a planar projection, rather than a cylindrical projection. The only true representation of distance, area, shape, and proximity is a globe and those aren't very easy to fold up and put in our pockets are they?
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.
When a curved surface is represented on a flat surface, usually either distances or directions must be distorted. Various "projections" exist to minimize these distortions in whatever way is important to the cartographer.
No, there are many different projections.
=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.=
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.
A system of mapping the round earth on a flat surface is called a map projection. Map projections are used to represent the Earth's curved surface on a two-dimensional map. Different map projections have different strengths and weaknesses depending on the purpose of the map.
A map is a two-dimensional representation of the Earth's surface that distorts features like shape, area, distance, or direction to some degree. Different map projections are used to show specific aspects of the Earth more accurately, but all map models are inherently distorted due to the challenge of representing a three-dimensional object on a flat surface.
projections r called ..VILLI
Polar maps distort the size and shape of landmasses as they move away from the poles towards the equator. This distortion occurs because the map projection used to create a polar map cannot accurately represent the three-dimensional Earth on a two-dimensional surface. The closer you get to the pole on a polar map, the less distortion there typically is.
Map projections are created by mathematically transforming the curved surface of the Earth onto a flat plane. This process involves distorting certain aspects of the map, such as shapes, areas, distances, or directions, to create a 2D representation of the Earth's surface. Different map projections serve different purposes, and each comes with its own set of distortions.