Posts from — July 2009
Mapping Out A Cartography/GIS Career
A nice little overview of the work of the modern cartographer and cartography in the UK’s Independent can be read here.
“You have to create symbols that work with each other. There’s a hierarchy of information for each map and you have to make sure the important things stand out,” he adds. This involves communicating well with clients.
July 29, 2009 No Comments
Vinland Map of America in News Again
After 5 years of testing the 15th Century Vinland Map of America, a Danish expert has declared the map to be genuine.
Controversy has swirled around the map since it came to light in the 1950s, many scholars suspecting it was a hoax meant to prove that Vikings were the first Europeans to land in North America — a claim confirmed by a 1960 archaeological find.
Rene Larsen, rector of the School of Conservation under the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, said his team carried out studies of the ink, writing, wormholes and parchment of the map, which is housed at Yale University in the United States. Among the team’s conclusions:
…claims the ink was too recent because it contained a substance called anatase titanium dioxide could be rejected because medieval maps have been found with the same substance, which probably came from sand used to dry wet ink.
Read the full article here.
July 19, 2009 No Comments
