Lecture 3 Cartography
Lecture 3 Cartography
By: AB Motau
Introduction
• This presentation covers:
– an introduction to scale maps, what they are
and how they are made;
– basic cartography – standard conventions in
making maps.
What is a scale map?
• A map drawn using measurement
• Shows a distance measured on the
ground according to a certain proportion
• Measures direction also
• Any point on the map has a relationship to
any other point according to a measured
distance and direction
What is cartography?
• Cartography is the art and science of
making maps.
• There are standard cartographic
conventions for making scale maps.
Basic elements of a scale map
• Symbols and a legend
• Scale
• Direction (indicated by the north arrow)
• Map grid or coordinate system
• About the map (date created, title, author,
source information)
Why use symbols on a map?
• Words alone would clutter the map.
• Symbols can help organise the
information.
• Symbols can depict complex ideas or
things.
• The legend or reference explains the
symbols.
Types of maps
• Base maps show where something is in
space.
• Thematic maps tell the story about the
place.
Base maps
• Base maps are reference maps. They
contain:
– reference features such as rivers, roads,
terrain and settlements;
– cartographic references such as a coordinate
system, north direction and scale.
Types of base maps
• Topographic maps
• Radar image maps
• Aerial photo maps
• Satellite image maps
• River maps
Thematic maps
• Depict a specific theme or subject about a
certain geographic area
• Illustrate physical, social, political,
cultural, economic, sociological,
agricultural or any other aspects of a
place
Examples of thematic maps
Topographic maps
• Most common kind of
base map
• Topography means
shape and elevation
of the land
• Topography is shown
with contour lines
Contour lines
• Indicate height or elevation
of the land above sea level
Contour lines
• Pattern of the contour
lines show the shape
of the land
• Note that contour lines:
– are never straight;
– never cross each
other;
– always cross rivers.
Contour interval
• The vertical distance
between two adjacent
contour lines
• The same for all the
contour lines on the
map
• Depends on the scale
of the map
What does scale mean?
• Scale is about distance. How long? How
far? How wide? How far on the map and
how far on the ground?
• A map drawn to scale means that the
distance between any two points on the
drawing is in proportion to the distance on
the ground.
How is scale written?
• A fraction scale looks like this: 1:25,000.
• It is written or said like this: “one to twenty-
five thousand scale”.
• It is shown as a graph scale like this:
1:25,000 scale