4: Map Projections Flashcards

1
Q

EXPLAIN WHY WE NEED LOCATIONAL REFERENCE SYSTEMS

A

We need a locational reference system so we can accurately describe where something is located.
Might be x y coordinates, a grid reference on a map, or latitude and longitude.

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2
Q

LIST TYPES OF LRS

A

Planar - assumes a 2D surface
Spherical - assumes a curved 2D surface
Most well know: latitude and longitude (spherical example of a geographic coordinate system)

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3
Q

EXPLAIN WHY MAP PROJECTIONS MATTER FOR GIS

A

Maps are flat, the planet is not, projections are used to project the globe to a 2D plane. However, this introduces distortions!

Data layers can only be aligned in GIS given the same locational reference system AND projection!

It can also cause distances and areas to be wrong if you use a projection that distorts either of these properties.

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4
Q

GIVE EXAMPLES OF MAP PROJECTION TYPES

A

Planar (azimuthal), Cylindrical, Conic

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5
Q

LIST DISTORTION CHARACTERISTICS OF MAP PROJECTIONS

A

Three important properties:
Conformal (shape)
Equal Area (area)
Equal Distance/Direction (angle/direction and distance)

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6
Q

Longitude

A
meridians
cut through the poles
always divide globe in half
each is equal in length
Prime Meridian (0) is Greenwich
widest apart at equator
closest at poles
measured in degrees relative to the prime meridian (-180 west to +180 east)
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7
Q

Longitude

A
also called meridians
cut through the poles
always divide globe in half
each is equal in length
Prime Meridian (0) is Greenwich
widest apart at equator
closest at poles
measured in degrees relative to the prime meridian (-180 west to +180 east)
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8
Q

Latitude

A

also called parallels
lie at right angles with longitude
concentric circles
each circle has a different circumference
0 at equator
are represented at the poles as a point
measured relative to equator -90 at south pole, +90 at north pole

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9
Q

How is a projection different than an LRS?

A

A map projection uses mathematical formulas to relate spherical coordinates (x, y) on the globe to planar 2D Cartesian coordinates

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10
Q

What is a projected coordinate system?

A

A geographical (spherical) coordinate system (LRS) projected onto a flat 2D plane.

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11
Q

How is a map projection different than an LRS?

A

A map projection uses mathematical formulas to relate spherical coordinates (x, y) on the globe to planar 2D Cartesian coordinates

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12
Q

Peters vs Mercator projections

A

Mercator - used for navigation, any course is a straight line
Peters - equal area

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13
Q

Peters vs Mercator projections

A

Mercator - used for navigation, any course is a straight line, distorts massively at the poles

Peters - equal area, most accurate at equator

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14
Q

3 types of map projections

A

Plane (azimuthal or planar)
resulting map is a circle, often used for mapping poles, distortion biggest at extremes and accurate in the middle

Cylinder (cylindrical)

Cone (conic)
wrap around one end of the globe, most accurate at the latitude where it touches

in all examples… most accurate where the ‘paper’ touches the globe (tangent) is the line of minimum distortion, centre map on this location

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15
Q

Conformal

A

Distortion characteristics in which shapes of small features are preserved - anywhere on the projection the distortion is the same in all directions
(navigation, straight line has a constant bearing)

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16
Q

Equal Area

A

Distortion characteristics in which shapes are distorted but preserve areal relationships (calculation of property areas, thematic mapping)

17
Q

Equal Distance

A

Distortion characteristics in which shapes are distorted but great circle distances/directions are true from one to all other points
(calc travel distance)

18
Q

Cylindrical projection

A

Wrap a cylinder around the globe
Mercator is one of the best known (cylinder wrapped around an equator)
Conformal distortion property
-at any point scale is the same in both directions
-shape of small features is preserved
-features in high latitudes are significantly enlarged

19
Q

Planar (azimuthal) projection

A

Touch paper with the globe
Azimuthal equidistant projection is one of the best known planar projections
Tangent location
-at a point on the sphere (standard point)
-or cut through the sphere (standard line)
Tangency can be varied: projection aspect
-polar aspect (tangent at pole)
-oblique aspect (at mid-latitude)
-equatorial aspect (at equator)
Distance/direction distortion property
-true from centre point along great circles

20
Q

Conic projection

A

Wrap a cone around the globe
Lambert Conformal Conic projection commonly used to map North America
-standard parallels occur where cone intersects the earth
-lines of latitude appear as arcs of circles
-lines of longitude are straight lines radiating from the north pole