1 / 52

Projections and Coordinates

Projections and Coordinates. Vital Resources. John P. Snyder, 1987, Map Projections – A Working Manual, USGS Professional Paper 1395 To deal with the mathematics of map projections, you need to know trigonometry, logarithms, and radian angle measure Advanced projection methods involve calculus.

madelyn
Download Presentation

Projections and Coordinates

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Projections and Coordinates

  2. Vital Resources • John P. Snyder, 1987, Map Projections – A Working Manual, USGS Professional Paper 1395 • To deal with the mathematics of map projections, you need to know trigonometry, logarithms, and radian angle measure • Advanced projection methods involve calculus

  3. Shape of the World • The earth is flattened along its polar axis by 1/298 • We approximate the shape of the earth as an ellipsoid • Ellipsoid used for a given map is called a datum • Ideal sea-level shape of world is called the geoid

  4. Shape of the World • Earth with topography • Geoid: Ideal sea-level shape of the earth • Eliminate topography but keep the gravity • Gravity is what determines orbits and leveling of survey instruments • How do we know where the sea would be at some point inland? • Datum: Ellipsoid that best fits the geoid • Sphere: Globes and simple projections

  5. The Datum

  6. Datums • In mapping, datums is the plural (bad Latin) • Regional datums are used to fit the regional curve of the earth • May not be useful for whole earth • Obsolete datums often needed to work with older maps or maintain continuity

  7. Regional Datum

  8. The Geoid

  9. Distortion • You cannot project a curved earth onto a flat surface without distortion • You can project the earth so that certain properties are projected without distortion • Local shapes and angles • Distance along selected directions • Direction from a central point • Area • A property projected without distortion is preserved

  10. Preservation • Local Shape or Angles: Conformal • Direction from central point: Azimuthal • Area: Equal Area • The price you pay is distortion of other quantities • Compromise projections don’t preserve any quantities exactly but they present several reasonably well

  11. Projections • Very few map “projections” are true projections that can be made by shining a light through a globe (Mercator is not) • Projection = Mathematical transformation • Many projections approximate earth with a surface that can be flattened • Plane • Cone • Cylinder • Complex projections not based on simple surfaces

  12. Choice of Projections • For small areas almost all projections are pretty accurate • Principal issues • Optimizing accuracy for legal uses • Fitting sheets for larger coverage • Many projections are suitable only for global use

  13. Projection Surfaces

  14. Simple Projection Methods

  15. Orthographic Projection

  16. Gnomonic

  17. Butterfly Projection

  18. Dymaxion Projection

  19. Azimuthal Equal Area

  20. Azimuthal Equal Area

  21. Azimuthal Equidistant

  22. Stereographic

  23. Equirectangular (Geographic)

  24. Equirectangular Projection

  25. Mercator

  26. Transverse Mercator

  27. Oblique Mercator

  28. Lambert Equal Area Cylindrical

  29. Peters Projection

  30. Ptolemy’s Conic

  31. Lambert Conformal Conic

  32. Albers Equal Area Conic

  33. Polyconic Projection

  34. Bipolar Oblique Conic

  35. Mollweide

  36. Aitoff Projection

  37. Sinusoidal

  38. Robinson

  39. Mollweide Interrupted

  40. Mollweide Interrupted

  41. Homolosine Projection

  42. Van derGrinten

  43. Bonne

  44. Specialized Projection

  45. Specialized Projection

  46. Transverse Mercator Projection

  47. UTM Zones

  48. UTM Pole to Pole

  49. Halfway to the Pole

  50. USA Congressional Surveys

More Related