Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- Chronological List of Papers with References to the Volumes in which they are contained
- Errata
- PART I PERIODIC ORBITS
- PART II THE TIDES
- PART III MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER
- 5 On some Proposed Forms of Slide-rule
- 6 An Application of Peaucellier's Cell
- 7 The Mechanical Description of Equipotential Lines
- 8 On a Mechanical Representation of the Second Elliptic Integral
- 9 On Maps of the World
- 10 A Geometrical Puzzle
- 11 A Geometrical Illustration of the Potential of a Distant Centre of Force
- 12 On Graphical Interpolation and Integration
- 13 On a Theorem in Spherical Harmonic Analysis
- 14 On Fallible Measures of Variable Quantities, and on the Treatment of Meteorological Observations
- 15 On the Horizontal Thrust of a Mass of Sand
- 16 On the Formation of Ripple-mark in Sand
- 17 Note on Mr Davison's Paper on the Straining of the Earth's Crust in Cooling
- 18 On the Mechanical Conditions of a Swarm of Meteorites, and on Theories of Cosmogony
- 19 On the Perturbation of a Comet in the Neighbourhood of a Planet
- 20 The Eulerian Nutation of the Earth's Axis
- 21 The Analogy between Lesage's Theory of Gravitation and the Repulsion of Light
- PART IV PAPERS ON TIDES (Supplementary to Volume I)
- PART V ADDRESSES TO SOCIETIES
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
- Plate section
9 - On Maps of the World
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- Chronological List of Papers with References to the Volumes in which they are contained
- Errata
- PART I PERIODIC ORBITS
- PART II THE TIDES
- PART III MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER
- 5 On some Proposed Forms of Slide-rule
- 6 An Application of Peaucellier's Cell
- 7 The Mechanical Description of Equipotential Lines
- 8 On a Mechanical Representation of the Second Elliptic Integral
- 9 On Maps of the World
- 10 A Geometrical Puzzle
- 11 A Geometrical Illustration of the Potential of a Distant Centre of Force
- 12 On Graphical Interpolation and Integration
- 13 On a Theorem in Spherical Harmonic Analysis
- 14 On Fallible Measures of Variable Quantities, and on the Treatment of Meteorological Observations
- 15 On the Horizontal Thrust of a Mass of Sand
- 16 On the Formation of Ripple-mark in Sand
- 17 Note on Mr Davison's Paper on the Straining of the Earth's Crust in Cooling
- 18 On the Mechanical Conditions of a Swarm of Meteorites, and on Theories of Cosmogony
- 19 On the Perturbation of a Comet in the Neighbourhood of a Planet
- 20 The Eulerian Nutation of the Earth's Axis
- 21 The Analogy between Lesage's Theory of Gravitation and the Repulsion of Light
- PART IV PAPERS ON TIDES (Supplementary to Volume I)
- PART V ADDRESSES TO SOCIETIES
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
The ordinary stereographic projection of the world in two hemispheres is utterly worthless as giving a true impression of the whole; for the linear scale at the margins of the circles is twice that at their centres. Its only merit is that there is no angular distortion. Mercator's projection gives a still more fallacious impression, except as regards the equatorial regions.
It appears to me therefore that there is a want, in the school-room and lecture-room, of some map which shall give a more truthful representation of the globe than the above, and which yet shall not be so expensive and cumbrous as a globe.
A gnomonic projection on to the faces of a regular icosahedron is but very slightly distorted, although a slight amount of angular distortion is here introduced. I have been told that at the recent Geographical Congress at Paris, some such projections as this were exhibited, and that they were of old date. Mr Proctor has also made star-maps by projection on to the faces of a regular dodecahedron; but in 1873, when the idea occurred to me of using this projection, I was not aware of the fact.
If the icosahedral projection be developed and arranged as a band of ten triangles round the equator, with saw-like edges of five triangles in the north and five in the south, a very fair representation of the globe is given.
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- The Scientific Papers of Sir George DarwinPeriodic Orbits and Miscellaneous Papers, pp. 276 - 280Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1911