To see the other types of publications on this topic, follow the link: Materiel de cartographie.

Journal articles on the topic 'Materiel de cartographie'

Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles

Select a source type:

Consult the top 50 journal articles for your research on the topic 'Materiel de cartographie.'

Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.

You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.

Browse journal articles on a wide variety of disciplines and organise your bibliography correctly.

1

Chabaniuk, Viktor, and Kateryna Polyvach. "Cartographic interpretation of the “meta” notion in the cultural heritage context." InterCarto. InterGIS 26, no. 4 (2020): 371–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.35595/2414-9179-2020-4-26-371-384.

Full text
Abstract:
The monograph [Aslanikashvili, 1974] does not define the term “metacartography”, although the notion itself is described in sufficient detail to be understood. A. Aslanikashvili’s metacartography has proven to be very useful in considering the relations between modern systematic cartographic phenomena, which are often relate to Web 2.0 cartography. The article offers a practical interpretation of the “meta” notion in such phenomena as National Atlases, National Spatial Data Infrastructures and OpenStreetMap. This is done using the Conceptual Frameworks (CoFr) method and the Atlas Extender (AtEx), which allow extending atlases in the classical sense to extended atlas systems. AtEx implements a CoFr method of relational cartography based on patterns (hereinafter RelCa), among which are relational patterns of “meta”. CoFr describe the structure of spatial information systems in an extended sense, and relational cartographies are defined as the coordinated art, science and technology of making and using relations in (extended) cartographic systems and between (extended) cartographic systems. Due to this we can consider relational spaces that have a lot in common with the specific spaces of A. Aslanikashvili. To apply the RelCa methods, the understanding of “metacartography”, “map meta-model” and “map language” notions have been updated. For this purpose, Model-Based Engineering (MBE) has been used, an area of computer science that is evolving in our century. The analogies between BMI constructions, modern systematic cartographic phenomena and A. Aslanikashvili metacartography are shown. It has been proved abductively that in modern conditions the field of cartography research needs to be extended by relational spaces or to a system of spatial systems of a certain epistemological structure. Important in this structuring is the relation of “meta” that A. Aslanikashvili began to explore. The abduction proved the presence and necessity of using the “meta” relation when constructing cultural heritage maps. In particular, the interpretation of the “meta” relation for choropleth maps is proposed, modeling the saturation assessment of the country by the entities of the material cultural heritage. The results obtained will be included in the Atlas of Cultural Heritage of Ukraine.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
2

Petkov, Dobrin, and Temenoujka Bandrova. "Classification of cartographic models according to their content, dimensionality, material of production and types of reality." InterCarto. InterGIS 26, no. 1 (2020): 434–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.35595/2414-9179-2020-1-26-434-446.

Full text
Abstract:
Cartography as one of the most ancient science and practice supply users with cartographic models and deliver them with geospatial information. Now in the days of technological revolution and digital earth we cannot find clearly classification of cartographic models including the latest achievements of science, technics and methodology. Several classifications, mainly of maps are shown and critical review is done. It is visible that no standardization in this field. Cartography as a mathematical science need classification system of its models, data and information. It is needed to everybody who make and use cartographic models. The classification system offers a possible method for selecting a suitable model that can be used to visualize a data set or theory. The point of classification is to take large number of observations and group them into data ranges or classes. This paper represents an information about cartographic models and make attempt to classify them according to their content (general, thematic, specialized), dimensionality (2D, 2.5D, 3D, 4D, multidimensional), material of production (paper / hard base, digital, anaglyph, holographic, web), and types of reality (virtual, augmented, physical). This is done on the base of new cartographic models appeared with technical innovation and computer-aided systems used in cartography nowadays.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
3

Zanina, T. A., and A. P. Kopytko. "CARTOGRAPHIC REPRODUCTION OF COPYRIGHTABLE OBJECTS." Theory and Practice of Forensic Science and Criminalistics 15 (November 30, 2016): 360–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.32353/khrife.2015.45.

Full text
Abstract:
The article deals with the notions of cartographic items, their varieties, subjects of the copyright thereon. Cartographic items include items of any material form with a cartographic image. The copyright covers cartographic images regardless of their purposes, topics, content, merits, volume as well as the way of reproduction: in a graphic, digital or any other form. Copyright protection covers both primary, original cartographic items, and items that were received as the result of a creative modification that led to significant changes in the content or form. The most common infringements of copyright in cartography include: illegal, without the permission of the author use of a cartographic base; conversion of the original cartographic item into a digital form without the permission of the author and its introduction in commercial circulation; the use of a cartopgraphic base as an advertising element; the use and illegal uploading of cartopgraphic products on the Internet.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
4

Sánchez, Olga Blázquez. "Collaborative Cartographies: Counter-Cartography and Mapping Justice in Palestine." Journal of Holy Land and Palestine Studies 17, no. 1 (May 2018): 75–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/hlps.2018.0180.

Full text
Abstract:
Maps do not only represent space, but also produce it. This article is an attempt to approach cartographies from a performative perspective in order to argue that maps actually do things. The article is divided into three main parts that develop a reflection on the role of maps as devices, a comparison between different maps representing the Old City of Jerusalem, and an analysis of the ability of different actors (collectives, artists, and so on) to develop counter-cartographies with the aim of transforming the field, the community, the surrounding landscape, and, consequently, the material and socio-political conditions in Palestine.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
5

Sletto, Bjørn, Gerónimo Barrera de la Torre, Alexandra Magaly Lamina Luguana, and Davi Pereira Júnior. "Walking, knowing, and the limits of the map: performing participatory cartographies in Indigenous landscapes." cultural geographies 28, no. 4 (July 22, 2021): 611–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/14744740211034479.

Full text
Abstract:
Post-representational cartography views maps as inherently unstable and unfinished, always in the making and thus singularly open for refolding and re-presentation. This perspective on maps calls for greater attention to the performances, negotiations, and contestations that occur during the ongoing production of maps, particularly in cases where maps are developed during collective, collaborative, and participatory processes in Indigenous landscapes riven by conflict and struggle. In the following, we examine the role of walking for the continual (re)making of participatory maps, specifically engaging with work in Indigenous methodologies to consider how an emphasis on performativity in map-makings may foster a post-representational perspective on Indigenous cartographies. We understand walking as map-making, a form of knowledge production generated by performative and situated storytelling along paths and in places filled with meaning. Drawing on a critical understanding of ‘invitation’ and ‘crossing’, we build on our experiences from participatory mapping projects in Mexico, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Brazil to explore the ways in which the material, performative crossings of bodies through Indigenous landscapes may inspire new forms of knowledge production and destabilize Cartesian cartographic colonialities.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
6

Zamiatin, Dmitri. "Post-City (II): Cartographies of Imaginaton and Co-spatiality Politics." Sotsiologicheskoe Obozrenie / Russian Sociological Review 18, no. 1 (March 2019): 9–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.17323/1728-192x-2019-1-9-35.

Full text
Abstract:
From a methodological standpoint, a comprehensive study of post-urbanism implies a cognitive fixation of any spatial event as co-spatial. We can talk about the co-existence of different cognitive/ontological regimes in the post-urban reality, which themselves can also be called co-spatial. Co-spatialities, understood as communicative event nodes, can be considered as key elements in a prototypical imagination map of post-urban space. Post-urban geo-cultures, producing a variety of cartographies of the imagination, are fundamentally heterotopic. Different communities become post-urban in forming their transversal cartographies of the imagination, constantly proliferate, become more and more co-spatial and, consequently, generate this post-politics which is aimed at accelerating a multiple dispersion of communicative events. Post-urban communities create post-political situations in which the cartographies of the imagination becomes the bases of new urban landscapes or new geo-cultures. The post-city develops practices and processes of hetero-textuality when the texts of individual geo-cultures do not assume a common space of reading, a plan of value, or a plan of expression, and only comes into existence in terms of consistent landscape modulations immanent to imaginary cartographies. Any post-city cartography of imagination supports special landscape modes which create the realities of material and mental character. Any cartography of imagination can be thought of phenomenologically as the line becomes a particular identity of individuals and communities. Post-nomadic mobilities lead to the coexistence of multitudes of such cartographies whose event co-spatialities create a post-political communities, and manipulate differences of the “velocity” of multiple communicative discourses. The creation of new cartographies of imagination forms post-urbanism as an art of detailed co-spatialities.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
7

Radulović, Danijela. "Kartografija Crne Gore s naglaskom na prve domaće karte Crne Gore." BOSNIACA 25, no. 25 (December 14, 2020): 99. http://dx.doi.org/10.37083/bosn.2020.25.99.

Full text
Abstract:
Radi se o kartografskoj interesantnosti i zastupljenosti “istorijskog prostora” Crne Gore u kontekstu sfera velikih sila i njihovog prikazivanja. Prati se kartografija od IV do XX vijeka, s naglaskom na prve domaće karte Crne Gore u XIX vijeku.-----------------------------------------------Cartography of Montenegro with the emphasis on its earliest domestic mapsThis work discusses cartographic attractiveness and representation of the Montenegrin “historic spaces” in the context of the Great Powers spheres of influence and their imperial assessment of the cartographic material. It gives an overview of the “historic space” of Montenegro between the 4th and 20th century, esp. in Ancient, Medieval and Modern Ages, placing special emphasis on the earliest and subsequent domestic/local maps.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
8

Mangan, Elizabeth. "Cartographic Materials." Journal of Map & Geography Libraries 3, no. 2 (June 14, 2007): 23–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j230v03n02_03.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
9

Veres, Madalina Valeria. "Unravelling a Trans-Imperial Career: Michel Angelo de Blasco's Mapmaking Abilities in the Service of Vienna and Lisbon." Itinerario 38, no. 2 (August 2014): 75–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0165115314000369.

Full text
Abstract:
During the eighteenth century, the global environment of imperial competition and cooperation encouraged the circulation of highly qualified mapmaking personnel from the service of one ruler to the other, thus contributing to the dissemination of cartographic knowledge. This article examines the career of military engineer and mapmaker Michel Angelo de Blasco (1697-1772), whose life in the service of the Habsburg Monarchy and the Portuguese Empire illustrates the importance of trans-imperial approaches to the history of cartography. As Vienna and Lisbon sponsored large mapmaking enterprises, including border demarcations and military surveys, skilled cartographers became precious resources for these empires. However, in the case of de Blasco, the invaluable service done in Brazil for the Portuguese monarch, made him both sought-after as a potential information source for the Habsburg monarchs and unemployable due to the risk of a diplomatic conflict. The efforts of de Blasco to transition back into the service of Vienna included the unauthorised submission of cartographic material. Additionally, the details of the negotiations regarding this mapmaker's possible transfer reveal the processes of institutionalisation and centralisation Habsburg cartography underwent during the time of Maria Theresa (1740-80).
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
10

Kraseha, Erofey, and Oksana Tsurkan. "Soil-cartographic material as a basis for the development of agricultural-meliorative measures on irrigation massif and their evaluation." Visnyk of the Lviv University. Series Geography, no. 51 (December 27, 2017): 167–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vgg.2017.51.8856.

Full text
Abstract:
The article discusses the problems of using soil-cartographic materials in the development of measures to optimize land-valuation work on the irrigation massifs of the south of Ukraine. Attention is focused on such problems as the quality of soil maps, which were compiled in the 1960s. The basis for the development of agricultural-meliorative measures are soil maps and cartograms of agro-production groups, to which most can make a number of remarks that relate to the quality of these materials, no matter how attractive they may be after the cameral correction, digitization and presentation in the form of computer GIS packages. Particular importance is given to soil cartographic materials for the assessment and evaluation of land, especially on the land market. The conducted studies made it possible to establish that the land cadastre, their evaluation and assessment in connection with the introduction of the land market in Ukraine, may contain large errors that are associated with the use of obsolete soil survey materials. Therefore, there is a need for a repeated large-scale soil survey, which cannot be carried out without providing the necessary cartographic materials and space images that would be accessible to pedologists. The second important task is the development of methodological guidelines that would take into account both the achievements already obtained and all the new developments that have emerged in soil cartography in recent decades. It can be assumed that the agricultural-meliorative measures developed on this basis to increase the productivity of land and maintain soil fertility when they are embeded will have a significant economic effect and contribute to improving the ecological situation on irrigation massif. Key words: soil maps, evaluation and assessment of land, GIS-technology, irrigated agriculture.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
11

McEathron, Scott R. "Cartographic Materials as Works." Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 33, no. 3-4 (August 2002): 181–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j104v33n03_09.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
12

Welch, Grace D., and Frank Williams. "Cataloguing Digital Cartographic Materials." Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 27, no. 3-4 (December 15, 1999): 343–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j104v27n03_06.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
13

Baitsar, Andriy, and Iryna Baitsar. "The titles “Rus”, “Red Rus” on European maps of XIV-XVIII centuries." Visnyk of the Lviv University. Series Geography, no. 52 (June 27, 2018): 15–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vgg.2018.52.10165.

Full text
Abstract:
Geographers and historians are interested in the origin of the title “Rus” for a long period. It is an object of numerous speculations and hypotheses contained in geographical, historical and linguistic-cultural research. During the last two centuries, an enormous number of sources that devoted to the origin of the title Rus were amassed in linguistics, historical and geographical literature. The main aim of this article is to explore the location of Rus, Red Rus during different historical periods for indication of Ukrainian ethnic territory or its parts by using a foreign cartographic material of XIV–XVIII centuries. Development and becoming of cartography in this period were analyzed. The use of names “Rus”, “Red Rus” by European cartographers was researched. The views of researchers who have studied this question in different periods were analyzed. Changes in the title of “Rus” on European maps during the research period were tracked based on a detailed study and analysis of scientific and cartographic sources, summarizing the results of geographical research toponymy of Ukraine. The main maps, which depicted the territory of Rus, were chronologically described. A description of many old maps was made. The history of the mapping of the territory of Ukraine was represented in chronological order based on the processing of numerous cartographic and literature sources. Key words: Rus, Red Rus, White Rus, Black Rus, map.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
14

Baitsar, Andriy, and Iryna Baitsar. "The titles “Rus”, “Red Rus” on European maps of XIV-XVIII centuries." Visnyk of the Lviv University. Series Geography, no. 52 (June 27, 2018): 15–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/10.30970/vgg.2018.52.10165.

Full text
Abstract:
Geographers and historians are interested in the origin of the title “Rus” for a long period. It is an object of numerous speculations and hypotheses contained in geographical, historical and linguistic-cultural research. During the last two centuries, an enormous number of sources that devoted to the origin of the title Rus were amassed in linguistics, historical and geographical literature. The main aim of this article is to explore the location of Rus, Red Rus during different historical periods for indication of Ukrainian ethnic territory or its parts by using a foreign cartographic material of XIV–XVIII centuries. Development and becoming of cartography in this period were analyzed. The use of names “Rus”, “Red Rus” by European cartographers was researched. The views of researchers who have studied this question in different periods were analyzed. Changes in the title of “Rus” on European maps during the research period were tracked based on a detailed study and analysis of scientific and cartographic sources, summarizing the results of geographical research toponymy of Ukraine. The main maps, which depicted the territory of Rus, were chronologically described. A description of many old maps was made. The history of the mapping of the territory of Ukraine was represented in chronological order based on the processing of numerous cartographic and literature sources. Key words: Rus, Red Rus, White Rus, Black Rus, map.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
15

Wesner, Ashton Bree. "Contested Sonic Space: Settler Territoriality and Sonographic Visualization at Celilo Falls." Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience 4, no. 2 (October 16, 2018): 1–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.28968/cftt.v4i2.29909.

Full text
Abstract:
In this article, I argue that “seeing with sound" is a fraught political process with the potential to both obfuscate and assist Indigenous claims to land. I do so by analyzing the Portland District U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ 2007 sonar images of Celilo Falls on the Columbia River. I take up feminist materialist analytics developed by Native American and Indigenous Studies scholarship on cartography and refusal, and place them in conversation with the sonic geographies of Columbia River Indigenous writers. Namely, I use Elizabeth Woody’s poem Waterways Endeavor to Translate Silence from Currents (1994) to investigate how overlapping and conflicting deployments of sonic imaging play a major cultural, political, and material role in the (re)mapping of Celilo Falls. First, I present a theoretical framework that considers the role of what I call sonic knowledges in unsettling colonial visual cartographies. I use archival Army Corps’ maps and critical sonar studies literature to show how the Army Crops’ 2007 riverbed sonograms emerge from a longer context of US settler practices of enclosing land with maps and surveying water with sound. I then turn to a close reading of newspaper articles and state legislation to analyze how the sonograms take on a present political life in ways that repackage ocularcentrism and assuage settler guilt, thus authorizing ongoing US enclosure of Indigenous lands. Yet, I also bring to bear Indigenous sonic knowledges that position imaging processes as potentially antithetical to addressing questions of access to land and self-determination. Through examining newspaper interviews, public testimonies, and Elizabeth Woody’s poem, I elucidate deployments of sonic knowledge that can help us think about what anti-colonial (re)mapping practices demand of contemporary cartographic imaging processes. Attending to sonic knowledges under conditions of settler-ocularcentrism, I suggest, might assist anti-colonial feminist science studies engagements with processes of imag(in)ing Indigenous space.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
16

Pertsev, N. V., O. V. Ryabkova, and A. N. Sabarov. "«Taz robbery» in the retelling of the Chorographic drawing book." Известия Русского географического общества 151, no. 5 (November 5, 2019): 79–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s0869-6071151579-90.

Full text
Abstract:
The historical and geographical description of the most northern regions of Russia is still a poorly understood topic. The article analyzes historical material concerning the Tazovsky Peninsula (Western Siberia) presented in the cartographic source of the 17thcentury Chorographic drawing book of outstanding cartographer Semen Remezov. The authors reveal the peculiarities of the creation of the entire book as a whole and of the drawing itself, which had direct office sources. Identification of areas of historical events mentioned at the source, was carried out by means of comparing toponymic information in the source with modern data. As a result, it became possible not only to reconstruct the events outlined by the author of the drawing, but also to establish their spatial localization, which make possible detailed historical and archaeological research.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
17

Kopylova, Natalya S. "THE INTEGRATED METHOD TO THE MAP MATERIAL STORAGE IN RUSSIAN PRACTICE: FROM ANALOG TO DIGITAL." Vestnik SSUGT (Siberian State University of Geosystems and Technologies) 26, no. 3 (2021): 100–107. http://dx.doi.org/10.33764/2411-1759-2021-26-3-100-107.

Full text
Abstract:
The article analyzes the map data source storage in analog and digital form by means of various funds, agencies, organizations, libraries, private collections on the basis of an integration method. A conceptual integration model for the map material storage based on a hierarchical, tree-like topological structure has been developed. The topology of the map material storage was built and a conceptual model was presented. The defects in the creation and dissemination of materials (data), weakening the overall quality of the model, are noted. The prospects for the development of the industry of geodesy, cartography and spatial data, which will have a beneficial effect on the quality of the presented model, are noted. The proposed model of storage of cartographic materials demonstrates, for the most part, the Russian experience. It is concluded that against the background of the growing volume of spatial information about terrain feature, structuring and storing information, including in the form of map materials, is an important aspect in the effective use of data for making different levels of decisions.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
18

Gorgodze, Tedo, and Gocha Gudzuadze. "The use of electronic atlases for school geography teaching (for Georgian schools)." InterCarto. InterGIS 26, no. 4 (2020): 400–407. http://dx.doi.org/10.35595/2414-9179-2020-4-26-400-407.

Full text
Abstract:
Over the centuries, methods and techniques for creation and use of maps and atlases have gradually developed and improved. Cartographic products today are used by a large number of individuals, groups, companies or organizations. They are used for decision making, navigation, training, relaxation, information and many other practical purposes. Accordingly, the objective of modern cartography is to broaden the knowledge of cartography and geographic information and methods of its use among the general public, especially among schoolchildren. Practical experience shows that modern technologies (phones, smartphones, tablets, etc.) are of particular interest to students, so electronic theoretical and illustrative material should occupy an appropriate place in the teaching of school subjects. Learning subjects not only by textbooks but also using digital explanation will make learning process easier and happier. This article discusses a project “Geography of continents and oceans, electronic atlas”, created for electronic teaching of geography in the school system in Georgia. The project is intended as supporting material for the 7th and 8th grades of public schools and will enter into force in the 2020–2021 academic years. Successful implementation of the project will allow us opportunity similarly develop an electronic education method for other classes in public schools and will allow method to be used in other disciplines or to be extended to special secondary and higher educational institutions.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
19

Weimer, Katherine H. "Subject Analysis for Cartographic Materials." Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 27, no. 3-4 (December 15, 1999): 385–404. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j104v27n03_09.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
20

Stibbe, Hugo L. P. "Cataloguing Cartographic Materials in Archives." Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 27, no. 3-4 (December 15, 1999): 443–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j104v27n03_13.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
21

Koussoulakou, Alexandra, Yiannis Mitzias, Konstantinos Ntovas, Symeon Symeonidis, and Michail Bakoyannis. "Maps of Literary Trails in Thessaloniki." Proceedings of the ICA 2 (July 10, 2019): 1–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/ica-proc-2-67-2019.

Full text
Abstract:
<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> The work presented here is an approach on the subject of Literary Cartography, which deals with the topic of space in Literature as well as with the relationships that are formed between the literary and the real world. The aim of the work was to make the subject of Literary Cartography more widely known in the Greek academic circles. It was developed in the framework of a Diploma Thesis at the Laboratory of Cartography &amp;amp; Geographical Analysis (<i>CartoGeoLab</i>), Department of Rural and Surveying Engineering of the Faculty of Engineering of the Aristotle University (Thessaloniki, Greece) in collaboration with the School of Philology of the Faculty of Philosophy of the Aristotle University.</p><p>Literary Cartography has a long tradition dating back to centuries ago, and yet it is only rather recently that researchers started using maps as tools to analyse and interpret pieces of literary work, as well as to reach conclusions which would have been impossible without the help of cartographic material. While maps were initially used solely as complimentary additions to books, like helping the reader with the visualization of the geography of a novel, this is starting to no longer be the case. With the advent of the digital age and the GIS technologies, cartographers are not just presented with new challenges but also with new opportunities to further research previously unexplored aspects of Cartography. With the rise of digital technologies, which can deal with the complexities of literary space, maps are no longer just descriptive tools, but they can be used as guides to reach new conclusions.</p><p>The work resulted in a series of twelve (12) thematic maps, illustrating the literary geography of the works of ten Greek writers, whose stories take place in the city of Thessaloniki in Greece.</p>
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
22

Tsorlini, Angeliki. "Documenting, organizing and demonstrating the cartographic wealth of a library, through an information system, to the public." Abstracts of the ICA 1 (July 15, 2019): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/ica-abs-1-370-2019.

Full text
Abstract:
<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> Historical maps consist an important source of information and a research tool for several researchers of various scientific fields, especially the humanities (Michev 2016), who are working on the geographic analysis of the environment. For them, the digital comparative analysis of historical and modern maps offers a variety of benefits. It expands the scope of their research, providing them the opportunity to study the geometric and thematic properties of the maps, or they use maps constructed on different periods to detect and determine changes in the physical environment, border changes, or changes on the toponyms (e.g. Boutoura &amp; Livieratos, 1986, 2006; Livieratos, 2006; Tsorlini et al, 2010). This is really essential, especially when these changes are only apparent through maps and no other written source exists (Tsorlini et al, 2017).</p><p>Historical maps in different forms, independent or embedded in books, atlases or map series, are located in map collections mainly in libraries worldwide. These cartographic materials abroad are stored in specific departments in the libraries, where specialized personnel deals with them and is responsible for their management, preservation and demonstration to the public. This is not the case for our country, since many historical maps and other related cartographic material in libraries, remain almost unknown to researchers and generally to the public. Sometimes, there are difficulties even to detect historical maps in the library’s system, because they are documented and recorded following specific rules related mainly to traditional descriptive methods applied in book-keeping and book-archiving (Boutoura, 2014). As a consequence, there are important maps, who haven’t been studied or analysed until today and their important value has not been exploited yet in library’s environment.</p><p>One of the most important libraries in Greece and the second in size after the National Library, is the Library and Information Centre of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (AUTH Library). The cartographic material located in AUTH Library has not been documented and studied properly in all its size and the cartographic wealth has not been exploited in Library’s environment, until its cooperation with the Laboratory of Cartography and Geographical Analysis which was realized recently. In the frame of this cooperation, a research project was developed focusing on one of the AUTH Library’s collections, the very important Ioannis Tricoglou Library, with the aim to collect, document and organize the cartographic material found in this collection, in an information system, which will give the opportunity to researchers and to the general public to search for maps, independent or embedded in books, and to find relevant information for them through an easy and user-friendly digital environment. In this way, historical maps and other cartographic material located in Library’s collections will be demonstrated to researchers and the general public, presenting and promoting also the cartographic wealth of the library.</p><p>The main stages of this project are: a) the collection and documentation of the maps found in Ioannis Tricoglou Library, b)the proper transformation of these data to provide information through a database, c) the connection of the maps in thedatabase with other related textual and pictorial sources, in order to enrich the information provided for the maps not onlyfor researchers and students, but also for the library’s staff, simplifying in this way the searching procedure and finally(Tsorlini et al, 2018a), and finally, d) the development of a user-friendly digital environment, which will provide accessto historical maps and relevant cartographic material located in Ioannis Tricoglou Library. Emphasis on this project isgiven to the maps which were found inside the books, since they were not recorded and documented correctly, they werenot digitized in the proper way, thus it was impossible to detect them through the existing library’s system (Tsorlini et al,2018b).</p><p>In this paper, we will analyse shortly the main stages of the project and we will discuss the problems appeared during the whole procedure. Moreover, we will present its results, which can assist to the improvement of the library’s searching system and to the demonstration of the unknown cartographic wealth of the library to the academic community and general public.</p>
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
23

Larsgaard, Mary Lynette. "Cataloguing Electronic Cartographic Materials: Standard Cataloguing." Cartographic Journal 43, no. 1 (March 1, 2006): 5–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/000870406x93481.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
24

Corsaro, James. "Control of Cartographic Materials in Archives." Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 11, no. 3-4 (November 27, 1990): 213–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j104v11n03_10.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
25

Parker, Velma. "MARC Tags for Cataloging Cartographic Materials." Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 27, no. 1-2 (November 19, 1999): 5–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j104v27n01_01.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
26

Larsgaard, Mary Lynette. "Cataloging Cartographic Materials on CD-ROMs." Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 27, no. 3-4 (December 15, 1999): 363–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j104v27n03_07.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
27

Drecki, Igor. "GeoDataHub: Building centralised repository of authoritative cartographic and geospatial resources." Abstracts of the ICA 1 (July 15, 2019): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/ica-abs-1-66-2019.

Full text
Abstract:
<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> GeoDataHub (geodatahub.library.auckland.ac.nz) is an authoritative national repository of cartographic and geospatial resources curated by the University of Auckland Library for research, government, and educational communities, as well as the public of New Zealand. Its objectives are to digitise cartographic materials, provide integrated and enhanced data access, and build a unique knowledge base concerning New Zealand’s cartographic heritage. GeoDataHub showcases conceptual developments in cartography, surveying, photogrammetry, and other mapping, earth, and social science disciplines, highlighting their contribution to the development of the nation. It supports a dynamic, innovative, and leading edge historical and GIScience research, facilitating scientific discovery and knowledge building.</p><p> The repository contains digitised maps and charts published by authoritative agencies and research institutes, aerial photography provided by local authorities and all of government satellite imagery. A selection of key geospatial datasets produced by the government, Crown research institutes and local authorities augment the repository – currently over 30TB of data. The focus of GeoDataHub is on providing cartographic and geospatial resources for New Zealand, its offshore islands and territories; South Pacific, particularly Cook Islands, Niue and Tokelau; and Ross Dependency in Antarctica. Regional coverage primarily includes Auckland and Waikato, and parts of Northland, Bay of Plenty and East Cape. Local datasets cover primarily Auckland Region but a selection of datasets from other regions is also included. GeoDataHub is augmented by physical collection of maps and charts, atlases, aerial photographs, gazetteers, map indexes and catalogues, and cartographic paraphernalia, located in the Map Room of the University of Auckland Library.</p><p> This paper talks about challenges associated with the design, implementation and provision of content for GeoDataHub. Apart from building an integrated and enhanced data access application, facilitating textual, spatial and temporal search, metadata harvesting and discovery utilising GeoNetwork, a catalogue application that manages spatially referenced resources (www.geonetwork-opensource.org), the repository provides a further two ways of accessing cartographic and geospatial resources. One involves browsing the selected content of the repository, examining and downloading the material of interest; the other allows users to ‘map a drive’ and access all materials using familiar folder structure (the latter applies to the University community of users only). This approach however, occasionally requires provision of the same datasets in two different formats (compressed and uncompressed) depending how the users are accessing them. In addition, a knowledge base concerning New Zealand cartographic heritage is being implemented, providing a useful guide to authoritative mapping served by GeoDataHub. A particular challenge concerns documenting their provenance, content, extent and general characteristics in a modular fasion.</p><p> The paper concludes with presenting plans for extending GeoDataHub. This includes not only the creation of further geospatial records, provision of more content and expanding the knowledge base, but also strategic decisions concerning the selection of cartographic and geospatial resources and how to provide the best service possible to our growing user base.</p>
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
28

Nieścioruk, Kamil. "Cartographic source materials and cartographic method of research in the past environment analyses." Bulletin of Geography. Socio-economic Series 22, no. 22 (December 1, 2013): 81–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/bog-2013-0033.

Full text
Abstract:
Abstract The article reviews a methodology of using early maps and other cartographic materials in the past environment studies. The application of the cartographic method of research is presented on examples from different research fields, but cases from the Earth Science are analysed deeper - from hydrography, through geomorphology to many aspects of economic geography. What is broadly described is a detection of human interaction with the nature: all traces that are marked by settlement, land use, communication, etc. This paper shows that the past environment, with its ways of use and topology can be recreated using early maps. These materials help finding hidden marks from the past, saved in abandoned orchards, old roads composed into modern network, toponyms storing past spatial relations, etc. It is also shown that analyses of early maps have to be conveyed with great care and responsibility, especially when it comes to geometric properties of old cartographic materials. The Geographic Information System (GIS) is helpful in such a situation, but its use is more profound. In this paper GIS is described as a tool being a great step forward in the applications of cartographic method of research and many examples of such applications in the field of a landscape analyses are given - from simple yet informative numeric outcomes of research to 3D virtual creations of long-gone landscapes.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
29

Astakhova, I. S., and L. R. Zhdanova. "The role of maps in regional geological museum." Geodesy and Cartography 923, no. 5 (June 20, 2017): 43–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.22389/0016-7126-2017-923-5-43-49.

Full text
Abstract:
The modern state of map collection of the A. A. Chernov Geological Museum of Institute of Geology of Komi Science Centre of the UB of the RAS is described. The collection is divided into the historic and expository parts. It has shown the geological and geographical maps of the European part of North-East of Russia starting to XV age till now. The features of cartographic material for understanding the history of the study and development of the territory are described. It highlights the role of cartographic material in the museum exposition in the study of the structural features of the earth's crust and mineral exploration. The problems of modern cartographic support of the museum are described and the requirements for maps are compiled. The modern cartographic material is an electronic maps and charts. It has shown the importance of the establishing of Regional Atlas for evaluating the history and the future development of the region.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
30

Kurach, T., and N. Levak. "Mapping information recognition of regions Ukraine for media materials." Bulletin of Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. Geography, no. 63 (2015): 64–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/1728-2721.2015.63.16.

Full text
Abstract:
Considered formation of imaginative cognition geographical space in the works of foreign and Soviet geographers. Defined the concept of geographical figure and image of territory and geographical factors and approaches to formation figures of territories in human mind. Informative and image reality is formed the best by media and special manipulation of public opinion is used often. The series of cartographic geoimages informative figures of regions of Ukraine is established using cartographic method of research based on the materials of national news on state channels.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
31

Sidorina, Inessa, Natalia Pozdnyakova, Evgeny Panidi, Tatiana Andreeva, and Maria Litvinova. "Integration of traditional and modern methods in GIS-based mapping." InterCarto. InterGIS 25, no. 1 (July 23, 2019): 35–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.35595/2414-9179-2019-1-25-35-46.

Full text
Abstract:
People have been using maps since immemorial times. However, since the end of the XX century when GISs became implemented into the processes of maps production, new types of spatial data models began to appear in addition to the usual cartographic imagery. Number of these models tends to grow, and consequently new terminology, classifications and standards are needed. Such terms as GIS-based mapping, geomatics and geoiconics have taken their place in the terminology of modern cartography. The article highlights the problems and trends of GIS-based mapping. Suggested several example projects which were done with the participation of the article authors, representing the integration of traditional and modern methods. The first example: the creation of maps with the original system of symbols, applying a design approach to the creation of map works. The work on the creation of the Atlas of Orthodoxy is a vivid example of this trend. The second example: the maps “support” the research and visualize or reflect the results of geoinformation analysis. Over the past ten years, active work has been carried out to support hydrological projects in the Arctic and Antarctic, as well as archaeological research in the Smolensk region and in the region of the Middle Yenisei. In such projects prevail, of course, mostly geoinformational approaches. The third example: the creation of maps using photographs and / or on the basis of aerial and satellite images. In archaeological studies conducted jointly with the Institute of the History of Material Culture of the Russian Academy of Sciences in the region of the Middle Yenisei; this kind of data is the most informative. Despite the innovations, it is extremely important to save the heritage of classic cartography, combining intelligently traditional and contemporary methods. Interaction of traditional and contemporary approaches is considered in this paper on the examples of projects carried out at the Department of cartography and geoinformatics of SPbSU.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
32

Sowa-Babik, Halina. "Cartographic Materials as a Means of Multimedia Communication." LIBER Quarterly 9, no. 2 (April 14, 1999): 180. http://dx.doi.org/10.18352/lq.7532.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
33

Bandrova, Temenoujka, and Silvia Marinova. "Cartographic materials and training for students’ disaster response." International Journal of Cartography 6, no. 3 (July 13, 2020): 302–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23729333.2020.1790816.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
34

Molochko, N. "MAP SEMIOTICS AND THE CONCEPT OF «FIELD» IN THE ATLAS OF UNIVERSITY (Atlas of HEIs) EDUCATIONAL – MANAGERIAL TYPE." Visnyk Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. Military-Special Sciences, no. 1 (43) (2020): 65–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/1728-2217.2020.43.65-72.

Full text
Abstract:
Map semìotiсs formed at the junction of cartography and semiotics, linguistic science, which investigates the properties ofcharacters and iconic systems as language structures. The importance of the consideration of its provisions for the newmethods and different way of spatial analysis applications and in the used to modern techniques and methods of spatial analysisand determination of the features of the state and development of material objects, processes and phenomena and their changesin time, is conditioned by the widespread use in different areas of public activity of the object language of cartography, therequirements for which are constantly increasing. In particular, this applies to the field of science, where the concept of "field"defines the transition from "discrete to continual" in which the map semiotics provisions of cartographic modeling are essential.Examples of maps of the "fields" of density of the manifestation (spreading) of natural, social and man-made phenomenadeveloped in different directions of scientific and practical implementation, consider the essence of the application of thenormalized structure of the semiotic sides of maps content, as a reference of requirements, to justify the methodology of suchresearch, including for institutions of the Higher Education System of Ukraine (HEIs).The work explores the possibility of using the concept of "field" in atlas mapping modeling. On the basis of this concept, thedensity (thickness) of the placement (spatial organization) of the structural units Taras Shevchenko National University of Kievwithin the borders of Kiev is justified. Its mapping, in the form of developments of the interactive atlas of the university, locallevel, educational - managerial type, because of the dispersed territorial structure and thematic content of its main sections iscarried out for the first time.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
35

RAJKOVIC, NIKOLAS M. "The Visual Conquest of International Law: Brute Boundaries, the Map, and the Legacy of Cartogenesis." Leiden Journal of International Law 31, no. 2 (March 16, 2018): 267–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0922156518000146.

Full text
Abstract:
AbstractThe late critical geographer Brian Harley forewarned that modern cartography had come to control and even ‘imprison’ spatial understandings of the earth. Where does this leave international lawyers when they encounter a quintessential ‘World Map’? Quite bluntly: tied to an inscriptive institution that has embodied the modern legibility and visualization of earth space. When speaking about the global arrangements of economic and political power constituted through law, what emerges, therefore, is the need for an expanded spatial literacy among international lawyers that critically engages the graphic legacy and influence of the geometric map. To enhance that literacy, I reach beyond the doctrinal field to engage a powerful spatial critique that has thus far encompassed scholarship across geography, international relations (IR) and sociology. A critique that took impetus over 20 years ago with John Agnew's assertion that modern social science had become captured by a ‘territorial trap’. The article attempts to enrich that critique with Mark Salter's insight on material power, Marshall McLuhan's emphasis on the medium of communication, and Bruno Latour's critique of cartographic naturalism. Specifically, I introduce the concept of cartogenesis as a way of underlining the deeper legacy and consequence of modern cartography, and specifically how the map medium should be grasped as a historical actant that has inscribed a particular ‘ground map’ of international authority. Lastly, the article looks at how geometric mapping now confronts new inscriptive ordering in the forms of transnational lists and contracts, which assert a growing scale of authority over earth space to an extent not seen since the Mercator Projection was recognized as an overriding geographic model.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
36

Kozelkova, Evgeniya, Boris Seredovskikh, Alina Vasikova, and Vladimir Isypov. "Cartographic Support of Local Environmental Monitoring of Licensed Areas of Oil Production Enterprises of the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug - Yugra." E3S Web of Conferences 295 (2021): 04002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202129504002.

Full text
Abstract:
The work includes environmental monitoring of the license areas of oil production enterprises of the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug. The main geological and ecological problems on the territory of the study object (Bakhilov license area) were identified. The spatial information sources of the use of GIS technologies for the creation of cartographic material were analyzed. The spatial information sources of the use of GIS technologies for the creation of cartographic material were analyzed. Methods of drawing up a project of an auxiliary coordinate network of locations of checkpoints and sampling and drawing up maps in the QGIS program were considered. Based on the standard GIS functionality, a cartographic model of the project plan for local environmental monitoring of license areas of the Bakhilov group of fields has been developed. Thanks to the series of maps created by the cartographic method, it is possible to monitor the anthropogenic load on the landscapes of the territory, the dynamics of the areas of anthropogenic changes, the degree of degradation of natural complexes.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
37

Kessler, Fritz. "Map Projection Education in General Cartography Textbooks: A Content Analysis." Cartographic Perspectives, no. 90 (August 16, 2018): 6–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.14714/cp90.1449.

Full text
Abstract:
As developments in the field of map projections occur (e.g., the deriving of a new map projection), it would be reasonable to expect that those developments that are important from a teaching standpoint would be included in cartography textbooks. However, researchers have not examined whether map projection material presented in cartography textbooks is keeping pace with developments in the field and whether that material is important for cartography students to learn. To provide such an assessment, I present the results of a content analysis of projection material discussed in 24 cartography textbooks published during the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Results suggest that some material, such as projection properties, was discussed in all textbooks across the study period. Other material, such as methods used to illustrate distortion patterns, and the importance of datums, was either inconsistently presented or rarely mentioned. Comparing recent developments in projections to the results of the content analysis, I offer three recommendations that future cartography textbooks should follow when considering what projection material is important. First, textbooks should discuss the importance that defining a coordinate system has in the digital environment. Second, textbooks should summarize the results from experimental studies that provide insights into how map readers understand projections and how to choose appropriate map projections. Third, textbooks should review the impacts of technology on projections, such as the web Mercator projection, programming languages, and the challenges of projecting raster data.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
38

Abdullin, Khalim. "Bolgar Saltpeter Plant in Historical, Archival and Cartographic Materials." Povolzhskaya Arkheologiya (The Volga River Region Archaeology) 4, no. 22 (December 20, 2017): 112–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.24852/pa2017.4.22.112.125.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
39

Novikov, Mikhail, and Marina Kharlamova. "The appearance of Yamal on the map of Russia. Isaac Massa and the searches for north searoute to China." InterCarto. InterGIS 25, no. 2 (2019): 370–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.35595/2414-9179-2019-2-25-370-382.

Full text
Abstract:
Dutch cartographer and merchant Isaac Massa’s activity in Muscovy at the beginning of the XVII century was studied. The information about the origin of the map of the northern coast of Russia, the Yamal Peninsula and the Gulf of Ob in the first place was analysed. In Russian historical publications Massa is considered to be a foreign agent who took a hand in the transfer of confidential information on the cartography of Muscovy to the Netherlands. At the same time, the selection of historical facts and documents and the action logic of Massa suggests otherwise. Massa was certainly one of the first who participated in creating the latest maps of the Arctic Ocean coast and the general map of Russia, and he did it with the direct support of influential Russian circles and in the interests of Russia. We assume that, аt the initial stage of his activity in Russia, Massa represented the interests of the first clan of merchants, the Stroganovs, wishing to include Siberia into the sphere of their direct influence. The material for the preparation of the drawing of Yamal, which was the first image of the peninsula on a map, was probably obtained from the Arkhangelsk coast-dwellers (pomors), who went by sea to trade in their trading station Mangazeya. The assumption that Massa secretly gained access to the so-called Book of the Great Drawing (Kniga Bol’shomu chertezhu) does not stand up to criticism. Massa left Muscovy in the spring of 1609, quite legally taking with him the latest materials on the cartography of Russia and with the task to publish them in the west as soon as possible. Published maps, the actual has consolidated the priority of Russia for the possession of the coast of Western Siberia.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
40

Sankova, Elena A. "Features of teaching cartographic disciplines of foreign students of the Institute of Natural Sciences and Biotechnology." Psychological-Pedagogical Journal GAUDEAMUS, no. 3 (2020): 37–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.20310/1810-231x-2020-19-3(45)-37-43.

Full text
Abstract:
We considered the peculiarities of teaching foreign students from Turkmenistan the discipline "Cartography with the basics of topography". We revealed the essence of the difficulties that foreign students have to overcome during the adaptation period in Russia. The difficulties of adaptation are associated with the mastery of the Russian language; entry into the new pedagogical system with its structural components; the presence of another culture and political system that influence the formation of interpersonal relations with fellow students and other people; new climatic conditions; distance from relatives and relatives; the need for self-service; material instability. We proposed to create special conditions in order to improve the quality of practical work performed by foreign students: the organization of mini-groups of foreign students of 2–3 people with the inclusion of one Russian student who can help his foreign fellow students do practical work; reduction of the number of compulsory practical works for first-year foreign students by one or two jobs compared to Russian students; inclusion of step-by-step algorithm of practical works performance in methodological instructions to them. As a basis, we proposed a vocational-oriented training technology that contributes to the adaptation of this category of students on the basis of individualization, differentiation and a personal-oriented approach and guarantees the achievement of the goal – the formation of cartographic competence.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
41

Day, Graeme M., and Andrew I. Cooper. "Energy-Structure-Function Maps: Cartography for Materials Discovery." Advanced Materials 30, no. 37 (December 4, 2017): 1704944. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adma.201704944.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
42

Mumford, Ian. "Catalogue of Cartographic Materials in the British Library 1975-1988." Geographical Journal 156, no. 2 (July 1990): 227. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/635356.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
43

Hidalgo, A. "How to Map with Ink: Cartographic Materials from Colonial Oaxaca." Ethnohistory 61, no. 2 (April 1, 2014): 277–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-2414172.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
44

Лазарева, Оксана Сергеевна, and Олег Евгеньевич Лазарев. "GEOINFORMATION CARTOGRAPHIC SUPPORT OF INVESTMENT ATTRACTIVENESS OF A MUNICIPALITY." Вестник Тверского государственного университета. Серия: География и геоэкология, no. 4(32) (December 15, 2020): 80–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.26456/2226-7719-2020-4-80-84.

Full text
Abstract:
В статье рассмотрена проблема применения цифровых технологий в визуализации и управлении информацией о муниципальном образовании. Приведены методы и технология создания геоинформационного картографического обеспечения инвестиционного потенциала муниципального образования. Обоснованы преимущества использования геоинформационного картографического материала в визуализации и управлении данными. The article deals with the problem of using digital technologies in visualization and management of information about a municipality. Methods and technology for creating geoinformation cartographic support for the investment potential of a Municipality are presented. The advantages of using geoinformation cartographic material in data visualization and management are substantiated.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
45

Konopska, Beata. "The cartographic materials auxiliary in the determination of the borders of Poland during the Paris Peace Conference (1919–1920) in the light of archival records." Polish Cartographical Review 48, no. 2 (July 1, 2016): 67–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/pcr-2016-0006.

Full text
Abstract:
Abstract The work indicated in Polish literature as the cartographic basis for the negotiations of Polish issues at the Paris Peace Conference (1919–1920) is Eugeniusz Romer’s Geograficzno-statystyczny atlas Polski (Geographical and Statistical Atlas of Poland). Given the complicated fate of the atlas, the position of its author in the Polish delegation, and the multidisciplinarity and importance of the conference, it is worth considering whether this atlas really played such an important role, or whether this is merely a statement, a repeated assignment of this role, to stave off concealment or lack of knowledge about other cartographic materials developed and used for the same purpose. Therefore, the main aim of this study was to determine the level of use of cartographic documents other than the Geographical and Statistical Atlas of Poland in lobbying and official negotiations of Polish issues before and during the Paris Peace Conference. The research task was associated with an extensive archival query, which confirmed the fact that dozens of maps survived, mainly manuscripts, which were prepared before and during the conference. It should be concluded that the maps of E. Romer’s atlas constituted one set of many equally important cartographic documents which were used by the negotiators at the Paris Peace Conference.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
46

Anggriani, Parida, Sidharta Adyatma, Akhmad Munaya Rahman, and Aswin Nur Saputra. "Peningkatan Kompetensi Spasial melalui Pembuatan Peta bagi Guru Geografi SMA di Kota Banjarmasin." Bubungan Tinggi: Jurnal Pengabdian Masyarakat 2, no. 1 (May 31, 2020): 30. http://dx.doi.org/10.20527/btjpm.v2i1.1922.

Full text
Abstract:
Rendahnya kompetensi spasial guru Geografi disebabkan karena kurangnya pemahaman guru dalam hal konsep data spasial dan penyajiannya yang sesuai dengan kaidah kartografis. Kegiatan ini bertujuan untuk memberikan pengalaman dan pemahaman kaidah kartografis serta pendalaman konsep menggunakan aplikasi ArcGIS dalam pembelajaran materi kartografis yang ada di kelas XII jenjang SMA sederajat. Sasaran kegiatan ini adalah guru-guru Geografi SMA sederajat di Kota Banjarmasin yang tergabung dalam kegiatan Musyawarah Guru Mata Pelajaran (MGMP) Geografi. Pendidikan. Pelatihan ini dilakukan dengan metode ceramah dan demonstrasi disertai tanya jawab. Hasil kegiatan pelatihan ini secara keseluruhan dapat dikatakan baik yang dilihat dari ketercapaian target peserta pelatihan, ketercapaian tujuan pelatihan, ketercapaian target materi yang direncanakan, dan kemampuan peserta dalam penguasaan materi. The low spatial competence of Geography teachers is due to the lack of understanding of teachers in terms of spatial data concepts and their presentation following cartographic rules. This activity aims to provide experience and knowledge of cartographic principles and the deepening of concepts using ArcGIS in learning cartographic material in class XII at the high school. This activity target is high school geography teachers in Banjarmasin, members of the Teachers of Geography Subject Meeting (MGMP). This training was conducted using lecture and demonstration methods accompanied by questions and answers. The results of this training activity can be said both as seen from the achievement of the training participants 'targets, the achievement of training objectives, the achievement of planned material targets, and the participants' ability to master the material.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
47

De Freitas, Maria Isabel Castreghini. "CARTOGRAFIA ESCOLAR E INCLUSIVA: construindo pontes entre a universidade, a escola e a comunidade." Revista Brasileira de Educação em Geografia 7, no. 13 (August 14, 2017): 135–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.46789/edugeo.v7i13.490.

Full text
Abstract:
Esse artigo tem como objetivo apresentar experiências na elaboração de material didático tátil e os procedimentos de aplicação em sala de aula, no âmbito da Disciplina Optativa Cartografia Escolar e Inclusiva, do Curso de Graduação em Geografia (Licenciatura), bem como do Projeto de Extensão Cartografia Tátil e Mapavox da UNESP - Rio Claro – SP. Inicialmente, realizou-se uma contextualização da disciplina e de sua dinâmica, bem como do projeto de extensão, desde os referenciais teóricos balizadores das práticas em sala de aula, até a concepção e elaboração de materiais didáticos inclusivos e de sua aplicação, visando a inclusão de pessoas com deficiência visual. Foram selecionados exemplos de materiais didáticos e aulas formuladas pelos estudantes universitários, para ilustrar o ensino de Cartografia e a elaboração de materiais didáticos táteis inclusivos. Os resultados indicaram que os alunos de Licenciatura em Geografia encontraram na disciplina uma oportunidade de realizar a elaboração de material didático e sua aplicação em sala de aula, por meio de intervenções efetivas e contato direto com pessoas cegas e com baixa visão, o que permitiu um crescimento de todos os participantes, que foram estimulados à elaborar materiais inclusivos norteadores para as práticas em sala de aula. PALAVRAS-CHAVE Cartografia escolar. Cartografia tátil. Material didático. SCHOOL AND INCLUSIVE CARTOGRAPHY: building bridges between university, school and community ABSTRACT This article aims to present experiences in the preparation of tactile didactic materials and procedures of application in the classroom, in the context of the discipline Inclusive and School Cartography, in the Geography Undergraduation Course (Bachelor), as well as in the extension project Tactile Cartography and Mapavox from UNESP - Rio Claro SP. In the first moment, it is presented a contextualization of the discipline and its dynamic as well as the extension project, emphasizing the theoretical references and the practical procedures in the classroom, looking for the elaboration of didactic materials and theirs applications, for the inclusion of visually-impaired people. Selected examples of didatic material, such as tactile game and model, and class plans prepared by Geography undergraduation students to illustrate tactile material and inclusive cartography practices are presented. The results indicated that students of Geography had in the discipline an opportunity to perform the preparation and application of inclusive material in the classroom, through effective intervention and direct contact with visually-impaired persons, resulting in a growth of all participants who were encouraged to draw up inclusive materials and to conduct practices in the classroom. KEYWORDS School cartography. Tactile cartography. Didactic material. ISSN: 2236-3904REVISTA BRASILEIRA DE EDUCAÇÃO EM GEOGRAFIA - RBEGwww.revistaedugeo.com.br - revistaedugeo@revistaedugeo.com.br
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
48

Arkan, Merve Senem. "Past and present: cartographic history of Famagusta." Miscellanea Geographica 23, no. 3 (July 31, 2019): 173–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/mgrsd-2019-0008.

Full text
Abstract:
Abstract The island of Cyprus has been occupied by various powers, during which time the historical and cultural contexts of the main cities of the island have changed and left behind material traces. One of these cities is the main port city of the island Famagusta, where the various ruling powers affected its fabric and the different historic structures of the city combine with modern in the contemporary city. These multicultural structures and historical layers can be followed on the maps. The aim of this paper is to follow the changing urban fabric of Famagusta by examining the selected maps from the 16th century to modern times. How much the city undergoes spatial alteration and how much of the historical structure and developments can be followed on the cartographic records? The paper will question the perspective of the cartographers towards Famagusta and their priorities in depicting this multicultural city.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
49

Kravets, E. A. "Generalized geographical analysis of a set of priority measures to eliminate accumulated environmental damage." Geodesy and Cartography 923, no. 5 (June 20, 2017): 50–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.22389/0016-7126-2017-923-5-50-55.

Full text
Abstract:
The author made testing of cartographic method of analysing regulatory documents. Schematic cartographic mapping and analysis of the planned priority measures for the elimination of accumulated environmental damage were done in this article. Classification of the original normative legal act was used. Limitations of accuracy represented by the cartographic material was specified. Local and substantial gaps in the list of relevant environmental measures were identified and classified on the basis of the analysis performed by the map-scheme. Ways compensation this data lack on the basis of the available industrial structure of these regions of the Russian Federation are scheduled. An indicative list of current and closed industrial enterprises is presented, which can be a true implementation of measures to eliminate accumulated environmental damage. Increasing the availability of more detailed and accurate information about the state of the environment and impacts will enable more precise mapping of environmental problems and details to design their solutions.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
50

Zawadzki, Mateusz. "Sources and methods of reconstruction of postal roads in the second half of the 18th century on the example of the former Lublin Voivodeship." Polish Cartographical Review 50, no. 4 (December 1, 2018): 233–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/pcr-2018-0013.

Full text
Abstract:
Abstract The subject of the article is reconstructing the routes of postal roads within the borders of the Lublin Voivodeship in the second half of the 18th century. The author has attempted to reconstruct the routes of postal roads, using the retrogression method and a cartographic research method with the use of GIS tools. For this purpose, manuscript cartographic and descriptive sources from the late 18th and 19th centuries were used. Cartographic material from the end of the 18th century in connection with descriptive sources constituted the basis for determining the existence of a postal connection. However, maps from the beginning of the 19th century constituted the basis for the reconstruction of the routes of postal roads. The obtained results allowed for the determination of the role of the Lublin Voivodeship in the old Polish communication system. The research has made us aware of the need for further in-depth work on communication in the pre--partition era (before 1795).
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
We offer discounts on all premium plans for authors whose works are included in thematic literature selections. Contact us to get a unique promo code!

To the bibliography