A Globe. It can be an exact scale model of the earth!
Areas near the poles are most distorted on maps, as the projection of the Earth's curved surface onto a flat map causes significant distortion in these regions. This distortion is known as polar distortion and results in inaccuracies in size and shape of landmasses near the poles.
Poles, specifically the North and South Poles, are typically represented on maps as points indicating the extremes of Earth's latitude at 90 degrees north and south. While they are crucial reference points in geography, their exact locations may not be emphasized on all types of maps, especially those focusing on specific regions or features. Additionally, the polar regions can sometimes be distorted in map projections, making the poles appear differently depending on the map's purpose. Overall, they are likely to appear on world maps but may vary in prominence.
Polar azimuthal maps or polar projections distort landmasses near the poles due to the nature of projecting a spherical surface onto a flat one. The distortion increases as you move towards the poles, making areas like Greenland and Antarctica appear larger than they actually are.
Advantages of the Gall-Peters map include more accurate representation of landmass sizes, particularly for regions near the poles, which are typically distorted on other maps. Disadvantages include distortion of shapes and orientations of countries and continents, making it difficult to visualize the world as we are used to seeing it.
A Globe. It can be an exact scale model of the earth!
Areas near the poles are most distorted on maps, as the projection of the Earth's curved surface onto a flat map causes significant distortion in these regions. This distortion is known as polar distortion and results in inaccuracies in size and shape of landmasses near the poles.
they are all distorted. distorted- misrepresented, garbled. ---- ur welcome! ; )
The Mercator projection World Map is the chart which is most distorted in the polar regions. Originally developed in the mid sixteenth century it was the most popular map for marine navigators for over 400 years. It is still useful for navigation at sea but has been supplanted by newer projections, especially after the advent of aviation navigation.
A map can be distorted by shapes, sizes, lines of latitude and longitude and politics,
Reference maps and Thematic maps are the broad categories of maps
Earth is three-dimensional, but maps are two-dimensional.
they had a distorted map
Polar azimuthal maps or polar projections distort landmasses near the poles due to the nature of projecting a spherical surface onto a flat one. The distortion increases as you move towards the poles, making areas like Greenland and Antarctica appear larger than they actually are.
I think it is distorted in land mass and shape
A map can be distorted by shapes, sizes, lines of latitude and longitude.
Someone who creates maps or charts.