Interruption Devices
The main purpose of interrupting a map is moving significant regions
to less-distorted places, usually near the center of each zone. Several
cartographic tricks enhance its usefulness.
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| Interrupted
Eckert IV
map with lobes recentered: only one meridian (not necessarily
the middle one) in each lobe is mapped to a straight line |
Especially with pseudocylindrical
projections, each lobe of an interrupted map may easily be
projected with its own, arbitrary central meridian, not
necessarily the same as the median one. This introduces
asymmetrical angular distortion, privileging regions near the
straight central meridian while detracting from others. The
central meridian may even change with latitude, like in the
Eurasian lobe of Boggs's
eumorphic map.
Recentering is also an effective device for uninterrupted
continental or regional maps. The region of interest is
centered, minimizing distortion, and the remaining projected
area is cropped off.
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| Ordinary map |
Meridians recentered |
Fully recentered |
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Three aspects of the Japanese islands using the
same Eckert IV projection. Every regional map covers the same
area but slightly different regions. The second option is better
for this particular projection, whose least-distortion parallel is
not the Equator, but instead near the interest area. The oblique
map is actually more distorted due to exaggerated latitudinal
scale close to the center.
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Condensing and Insets
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Same previous map, condensed at the Atlantic Ocean.
Part of Western Pacific is covered by an inset of uninterrupted
Antarctica, using a polar aspect of the same projection and
scale (an azimuthal projection would be more appropriate). |
Some cartographic devices are actually editorial tricks, intended
for clarity or printing convenience.
They do not affect distortion patterns, and can be employed purely
as lay-out tools.
Frequently applied
simultaneously with interruption, condensing the map means
removing unimportant areas and joining the remaining sections.
It can save publishing
space or, conversely, allow larger scales and better detail in the
same printed area.
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| Part of South America, both
in the main Mercator map and (shaded) in the inset. |
Also an editorial tool, an inset
is a small illustration
detached or superimposed on the main map, useful:
- for presenting an area strongly distorted or interrupted, or
impossible to be shown (like in
Mercator's projection)
by the main projection; the
azimuthal
equidistant is commonly employed for polar regions
- especially for large-scale maps of a small or lesser-known region, for
quickly pinpointing its location on Earth; the
azimuthal orthographic
is frequently used in small hemispheres
Abusing Interruptions
Like several cartographic techniques, interruption can be misused
or thought of as purely editorial convenience. Hastily or carelessly
prepared maps may suffer from:
- failure to clearly mark condensed areas
- interruption gaps not marked, suggesting continuity instead
Such maps may be good enough for advertisement, but unacceptable for
didactic or scientific purposes.
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| Interrupted Eckert IV map, not condensed
but with lobe gaps
colored like additional sea area; partial graticule and removal
of Antarctica help hiding the flaw. Although continental shapes are
better presented than in rectangular maps created by
cylindrical projections,
land/water area ratios are misleading and
distance between, e.g., Iceland and Greenland is greatly stretched.
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 |  |  |  |  | | www.progonos.com/furuti January 22, 2004 |
Copyright © 2001 Carlos A. Furuti