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- Remote Sensing 30 Years of Development and Vegetation Change in Abu Dhabi
- Antarctica’s Gamburtsev Province
- Mapping Subglacial Features in Greenland
- Mapping species distributions using open access geospatial data [M.Sc. Thesis]
- Land cover and land surface temperature change in Dubai between 1999 and 2009
- Alma Mater
Maps That Lie
In the age of Google Maps, the Mercator projection is perhaps the most widely used map projection in the world. The distortions in areal accuracy, introduced when trying to convert a spherical globe into two dimensional space, increase as you move away from the equator, and become quite severe as you get closer to the poles. Cartographers refer to the inability to compare size on a Mercator projection as “the Greenland Problem.” Greenland appears to be the same size as Africa, yet Africa’s land mass is actually fourteen times larger (see figure below right). Because the Mercator distorts size so much at the poles it is common to crop Antarctica off the map. This practice results in the Northern Hemisphere appearing much larger than it really is. Typically, the cropping technique results in a map showing the equator about 60% of the way down the map, diminishing the size and importance of the developing countries.

This was convenient, psychologically and practically, through the eras of colonial domination when most of the world powers were European. It suited them to maintain an image of the world with Europe at the center and looking much larger than it really was. Was this conscious or deliberate? Probably not, as most map users probably never realized the Eurocentric bias inherent in their world view. When there are so many other projections to chose from, why is it that today the Mercator projection is still such a widely recognized image used to represent the globe? The answer may be simply convention or habit. The inertia of habit is a powerful force
FYI: The “North” is 18.9 million square miles & the “South” is 38.6 million square miles.
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