12/8/2022 0 Comments Cartographica iiMonmonier M (2007) Cartography: the multidisciplinary pluralism of cartographic art, geospatial technology, and empirical scholarship. Monmonier M (2006) Cartography: uncertainty, interventions, and dynamic display. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL #CARTOGRAPHICA II HOW TO#Monmonier M (1996) How to lie with maps, 2nd edn. Monmonier M (1995) Drawing the line: tales of maps and cartocontroversy. Monmonier M (1993) Mapping it out: expository cartography for the humanities and social sciences. McKendry JE (2000) The influence of map design on resource management decision making. Association of American Geographers, Washington, DC MacEachren AM (1994) Some truth with maps: a primer on symbolization and design. Lobben AK, Patton DK (2003) Design guidelines for digital atlases. Lilley RJ (2007) Who needs cartographers? Cartogr J 44(3):202–208 Krygier J, Wood D (2005) Making maps: a visual guide to map design for GIS. Kintisch E, Kerr RA (2007) Breakthrough of the year: global warming, hotter than ever. Kimerling AJ, Muehrcke PC, Muehrcke JO (2001) Map use: reading, analysis, and interpretation, 5th edn. IPCC (2007c) Climate change 2007: synthesis report. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, p 10. Contribution of working group II to the fourth assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. In: Parry ML, Canziani OF, Palutikof JP, van der Linden PJ, Hanson CE (eds) Climate change 2007: impacts, adaptation and vulnerability. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK. In: Solomon S, Qin D, Manning M, Chen Z, Marquis M, Averyt KB, Tignor M, Miller HL (eds) Contribution of working group I to the fourth assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. IPCC (2007a) Climate change 2007: the physical science basis. Gartner G, Bennett DA, Morita K (2007) Towards ubiquitous cartography. WCB/McGraw-Hill, Boston, MAįield K (2005) Editorial ‘maps still matter-don’t they?’. Cartogr J 44(1):6–12ĭent B (1999) Cartography: thematic map design, 5th edn. Cartogr Perspect 49:4–9Ĭassettari S (2007) More mapping, less cartography: tackling the challenge. ACSM/ASPRS, Bethesda, MD, pp 423–427Ĭarter JR (2004) Cartography is alive (thank God!). Auto-Carto 10: proceedings of the 10th annual symposium on computer-assisted cartography. GIS World Books, Fort Collins, CO, pp 463–467īuttenfield BP, Beard MK (1991) Visualizing the quality of spatial information. In: Goodchild MF, Steyaert LT, Parks BO, Johnston C, Maidment D, Crane M, Glendinning S (eds) GIS and environmental modeling: progress and research issues. Nature 439:6–7īuttenfield BP (1996) Scientific visualization for environmental modeling: interactive and proactive graphics. ESRI, Redlands, CAīutler D (2006) Mashups mix data into global service. Scott)īrewer CA (2005) Designing better maps: a guide for GIS users. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin (Translated by W. Cartogr Geogr Inf Sci 34(4):293–303īertin J (1981) Graphics and graphic information processing. We suggest a research and policy agenda for the cartographic evaluation and design of climate change maps.Īrikawa M, Tsuruoka K, Fujita H, Ome A (2007) Place-tagged podcasts with synchronized maps on mobile media players. Our specific goals are to demonstrate the need and value of cartographic critique, describe how such evaluation can be accomplished, and make a case for cartographers’ engagement with climate change scientists in mapping activities. We use cartographic design principles to evaluate a ‘high visibility’ climate change map from the 2007 report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. We suggest that evaluating the quality of climate change maps is both timely and essential, and offer one approach as a demonstration. Yet, the cartographic design and quality of climate change maps have not been critically assessed nor systematically evaluated. The consequences of cartographic design are potentially significant to understanding climate change and effectively informing policymakers. Maps are essential in climate change research and policymaking, and are primary tools for communicating climate change information to the public.
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