- A team of three mapmakers, led by J Richard Gott from
Princeton University , have come up with a new kind of map that claims to be the most accurate, yet flat, depiction of the world yet. - It’s round and two-sided, much like a vinyl record.
- It has smaller distance errors than any single-sided map — setting a new record.
Now, there’s a
This new map has been developed by a team of map experts led by J Richard Gott, a professor of astrophysics at Princeton. Being two-sided, the map is able to show both sides of the globe without the conventional limitations of being 2D.
“If you’re an ant, you can crawl from one side of this ‘phonograph record’ to the other,” said Gott in a statement.
A new map, a new record
The accuracy of a map can be measured by what cartographers call the Goldberg-Gott score. It quantifies six types of distortions — local shapes, areas, distance, bending, skewness or lopsidedness and boundary cuts.
The lower score, the better a map is. The globe, for instance, would have a score of 0.
“Our map is actually more like the globe than other flat maps. To see all of the globe, you have to rotate it. To see all of our new map, you simply have to flip it over,” said Gott.
Until now, there are two map projections that are commonly found in textbooks and atlases. The Winkel Tripel flat map projection, which has a score of 4.563, and the Mercator projection, which has a score of 8.296.
This new flat map developed by Gott, Robert Vanderbei and David Goldberg managed to hit a score of 0.881. It has smaller distance errors than any single-sided map — setting a new record.
The previous record was set in 2007 by Gott himself along with Charles Mugnolo — also a Princeton alumnus.
The problem with the Mercator and Winkel Tripel projections is that distance errors become an issue the closer one gets to the poles. “We have continuity over the equator. Africa and South America are draped over the edge, like a sheet over a clothesline, but they’re continuous,” Gott explained.
For you and me, the new map can be printed front-and-back on a single page. All we would have to do is cut it out in order to use it.
The team, ideally, wants to print their maps on cardboard or plastic so that they can be stacked like records and stored together in a box or slipped inside the covers of textbooks. So, one could collect an entire set — a physical copy, a political map, one for population density and perhaps another climate. Or, the same concept could also be applied to other planets and you could collect the entire solar system.
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