Re: [MapHist] Publication announcement: Mer de l'Ouest by Don McGuirk

2011-03-15 Thread Jay L
This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the 
whole list)
o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + 


It's an "e-book" alright... as in an "exclusory book".

It's not really cool if all you have is a Mac that isn't tainted with  
Windows. Or you have a Mac and an old PC and don't intend to replace  
the latter when it crashes for the last time.


I think the idea is fantastic. Someone just needs to invent a simple  
way to make it functional independent of OS.


Jay L

On Mar 15, 2011, at 9:58 PM, Leigh Lockwood wrote:

This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying  
to the whole list)
o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o +  
o + o +


I hope this is just the first of many really cool similar projects.   
This is a great introduction to ebooks – or what do you call this  
format?


Best wishes and best of luck,

Leigh

(With apologies for any cross-posting.)

Publication Announcement:

The Last Great Cartographic Myth - Mer de l'Ouest by Don McGuirk
This cartobibliography is published on a USB flash drive, for use  
under MS/Windows.
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RE: [MapHist] Publication announcement: Mer de l'Ouest by Don McGuirk

2011-03-15 Thread Leigh Lockwood
This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the 
whole list)
o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + 

I hope this is just the first of many really cool similar projects.  This is
a great introduction to ebooks - or what do you call this format?

 

Best wishes and best of luck,

 

Leigh

 

From: maphist-boun...@geo.uu.nl [mailto:maphist-boun...@geo.uu.nl] On Behalf
Of Jeremy Pool
Sent: Tuesday, March 15, 2011 5:15 PM
To: Discussion group for map history
Subject: [MapHist] Publication announcement: Mer de l'Ouest by Don McGuirk

 

(With apologies for any cross-posting.)

Publication Announcement:

The Last Great Cartographic Myth - Mer de l'Ouest by Don McGuirk

This cartobibliography traces the appearance of the mythical Sea of the West
on printed maps. This imagined extension of the Pacific Ocean into the North
American continent - reflecting the hopes and dreams of a Northwest Passage
- appeared on printed maps beginning in 1700 and continued to appear for
over a century.  The cartobibliography describes and illustrates 239 maps
(many described in multiple states and versions), and is accompanied by an
introductory overview as well as the first translation into English of J.N.
De L'Isle's Nouvelles Cartes des Decouvertes de l'Amiral De Fonte, which was
a prime factor behind the appearance of Mer de l'Ouest on maps published in
the 18th century.

This cartobibliography is published on a USB flash drive, for use under
MS/Windows.  The flash drive format provides a number of  advantages over a
printed book:

> Copious high-resolution imagery. Most of the entries are accompanied by
one or more high-resolution images. Map images can be viewed at full (zoomed
in) resolution, or scaled to fit the image window.  Multiple image windows
can be opened simultaneously, allowing side-by-side comparison of map
images.

> Fully searchable and sortable: by map-maker, title, date, or any (or all)
of the available fields.

> Hyperlinks: The cartobibliography utilizes clickable hyperlinks to let you
jump between related entries and to open up web pages containing related
information (e.g. additional online imagery, WorldCat citations, etc.).

> Portable: The flash drive weighs 2 grams (8 grams when stored in its
credit-card sized case), yet holds nearly half a gigabyte of text, data and
imagery.

> Updateable: The author and publisher will release periodic updates, which
will be available as a simple (and relatively small) download from the
publisher's website. Instead of errata sheets or addenda & corrigenda pages,
the updates will bring the entire cartobibliography up-to-date with the
latest additions, corrections and imagery.

The cartobibliography is available ($45 plus shipping) directly from the
publisher, MapRecord Publications. Further information is available at
www.MapRecord.com/MerOuest.html.

___
MapHist: E-mail discussion group on the history of cartography
hosted by the Faculty of Geosciences, University of Utrecht.
The statements and opinions expressed in this message are those of
the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the University of
Utrecht. The University of Utrecht does not take any responsibility for
the views of the author.
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Re: [MapHist] [Fwd: Satellite Imagery Before and After Tsunami]

2011-03-15 Thread David M. Lawrence

This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the 
whole list)
o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + 

Why would you find the line "disturbingly distasteful?" There are a hell 
of a lot more serious things to get disturbed about -- such as the dire 
situation at the Fukushima Daichi plant. And frankly, I see nothing 
distasteful, either -- unlike the Twitter jokes that got the AFLAC guy 
fired.


I can see getting upset over something worth getting upset over. This 
doesn't seem to be one of those things.


Dave

P.S. As a physical geographer, I have to say that it is quite accurate 
to refer to videos of oncoming tsunami, etc., as "geography in action." 
I try to teach my students that a knowledge of geography can save their 
lives -- and it can. Too bad many miss the message because their too 
busy playing with their iPhones.


On 3/15/2011 6:17 PM, Gerhard Muller-Kosack wrote:

This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the 
whole list)
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I find the comment that "this is geology/geography in action" disturbingly
distasteful.

-Original Message-
From: maphist-boun...@geo.uu.nl [mailto:maphist-boun...@geo.uu.nl] On Behalf
Of Kurt Masters
Sent: 15 March 2011 21:04
To: maphist@geo.uu.nl
Subject: [MapHist] [Fwd: Satellite Imagery Before and After Tsunami]

This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the
whole list)
o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o +

Another interesting view...

   You can put your mouse on center of the line in the center of each
picture and drag it left and right... this will show before and after
the tsunami in each image. This is the best graphic demonstration of the
damage I have seen. And in CA people ran to the coast to see the
tsunami. This is not the movies, it is real life. This is
geology/geography in action.



http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011/03/13/world/asia/satellite-photos-ja
pan-before-and-after-tsunami.html?src=ISMR_HP_LO_MST_FB

















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--
--
 David M. Lawrence| Home:  (804) 559-9786
 7471 Brook Way Court | Fax:   (804) 559-9787
 Mechanicsville, VA 23111 | Email: d...@fuzzo.com
 USA  | http:  http://fuzzo.com
--

"All drains lead to the ocean."  -- Gill, Finding Nemo

"We have met the enemy and he is us."  -- Pogo

"No trespassing
 4/17 of a haiku"  --  Richard Brautigan

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Re: [MapHist] [Fwd: Satellite Imagery Before and After Tsunami]

2011-03-15 Thread Kurt Masters

This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the 
whole list)
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I apologize if anyone is offended. The paragraph came with the attachment.

Gerhard Muller-Kosack wrote:


This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the 
whole list)
o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + 


I find the comment that "this is geology/geography in action" disturbingly
distasteful. 


-Original Message-
From: maphist-boun...@geo.uu.nl [mailto:maphist-boun...@geo.uu.nl] On Behalf
Of Kurt Masters
Sent: 15 March 2011 21:04
To: maphist@geo.uu.nl
Subject: [MapHist] [Fwd: Satellite Imagery Before and After Tsunami]

This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the
whole list)
o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + 


Another interesting view...

  You can put your mouse on center of the line in the center of each
picture and drag it left and right... this will show before and after
the tsunami in each image. This is the best graphic demonstration of the
damage I have seen. And in CA people ran to the coast to see the
tsunami. This is not the movies, it is real life. This is
geology/geography in action.



http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011/03/13/world/asia/satellite-photos-ja
pan-before-and-after-tsunami.html?src=ISMR_HP_LO_MST_FB 


















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RE: [MapHist] [Fwd: Satellite Imagery Before and After Tsunami]

2011-03-15 Thread Gerhard Muller-Kosack
This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the 
whole list)
o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + 

I find the comment that "this is geology/geography in action" disturbingly
distasteful. 

-Original Message-
From: maphist-boun...@geo.uu.nl [mailto:maphist-boun...@geo.uu.nl] On Behalf
Of Kurt Masters
Sent: 15 March 2011 21:04
To: maphist@geo.uu.nl
Subject: [MapHist] [Fwd: Satellite Imagery Before and After Tsunami]

This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the
whole list)
o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + 

Another interesting view...

  You can put your mouse on center of the line in the center of each
picture and drag it left and right... this will show before and after
the tsunami in each image. This is the best graphic demonstration of the
damage I have seen. And in CA people ran to the coast to see the
tsunami. This is not the movies, it is real life. This is
geology/geography in action.



http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011/03/13/world/asia/satellite-photos-ja
pan-before-and-after-tsunami.html?src=ISMR_HP_LO_MST_FB 

















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hosted by the Faculty of Geosciences, University of Utrecht.
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Utrecht. The University of Utrecht does not take any responsibility for
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[MapHist] [Fwd: Satellite Imagery Before and After Tsunami]

2011-03-15 Thread Kurt Masters

This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the 
whole list)
o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + 


Another interesting view...

 You can put your mouse on center of the line in the center of each
picture and drag it left and right... this will show before and after
the tsunami in each image. This is the best graphic demonstration of the
damage I have seen. And in CA people ran to the coast to see the
tsunami. This is not the movies, it is real life. This is
geology/geography in action.



http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011/03/13/world/asia/satellite-photos-japan-before-and-after-tsunami.html?src=ISMR_HP_LO_MST_FB 


















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[MapHist] Publication announcement: Mer de l'Ouest by Don McGuirk

2011-03-15 Thread Jeremy Pool
This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the 
whole list)
o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + 


(With apologies for any cross-posting.)

Publication Announcement:

*The Last Great Cartographic Myth - Mer de l'Ouest* by Don McGuirk

This cartobibliography traces the appearance of the mythical Sea of the 
West on printed maps. This imagined extension of the Pacific Ocean into 
the North American continent - reflecting the hopes and dreams of a 
Northwest Passage - appeared on printed maps beginning in 1700 and 
continued to appear for over a century.  The cartobibliography describes 
and illustrates 239 maps (many described in multiple states and 
versions), and is accompanied by an introductory overview as well as the 
first translation into English of J.N. De L'Isle's /Nouvelles Cartes des 
Decouvertes de l'Amiral De Fonte/, which was a prime factor behind the 
appearance of Mer de l'Ouest on maps published in the 18th century.


This cartobibliography is published on a USB flash drive, for use under 
MS/Windows.  The flash drive format provides a number of  advantages 
over a printed book:


   » Copious high-resolution imagery. Most of the entries are
   accompanied by one or more high-resolution images. Map images can be
   viewed at full (zoomed in) resolution, or scaled to fit the image
   window.  Multiple image windows can be opened simultaneously,
   allowing side-by-side comparison of map images.

   » Fully searchable and sortable: by map-maker, title, date, or any
   (or all) of the available fields.

   » Hyperlinks: The cartobibliography utilizes clickable hyperlinks to
   let you jump between related entries and to open up web pages
   containing related information (e.g. additional online imagery,
   WorldCat citations, etc.).

   » Portable: The flash drive weighs 2 grams (8 grams when stored in
   its credit-card sized case), yet holds nearly half a gigabyte of
   text, data and imagery.

   » Updateable: The author and publisher will release periodic
   updates, which will be available as a simple (and relatively small)
   download from the publisher's website. Instead of errata sheets or
   addenda & corrigenda pages, the updates will bring the entire
   cartobibliography up-to-date with the latest additions, corrections
   and imagery.

The cartobibliography is available ($45 plus shipping) directly from the 
publisher, MapRecord Publications. Further information is available at 
www.MapRecord.com/MerOuest.html .


___
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hosted by the Faculty of Geosciences, University of Utrecht.
The statements and opinions expressed in this message are those of
the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the University of
Utrecht. The University of Utrecht does not take any responsibility for
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Re: [MapHist] Japan's Reshaped Coastline as Seen From Space

2011-03-15 Thread hillshaw
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whole list)
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Interesting - I was expecting the Japanese land mass to have got bigger as the 
result of tjis quake.  After all the tremor was the result of the Pacific plate 
diving iunder, and forcing up,  the Japanese plate.  Maybe when the floods have 
receded we'll see the longer term changes.

This is a link to some changes visible on Google Earth over the past decade or 
so

http://www.fooddeserts.org/images/GoogleEarth.htm

 

Dr Hillary Shaw
School of Business, Management and Marketing
Harper Adams University College
Newport
Shropshire
TF10 8NB
 

 

-Original Message-
From: Deborah Taylor-Pearce 
To: Discussion group for map history 
Sent: Tue, 15 Mar 2011 18:31
Subject: [MapHist] Japan's Reshaped Coastline as Seen From Space


This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the 
whole list) 
o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o +  
Posted today to the _PBS NewsHour_ blog, "The Rundown": 
 
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/2011/03/nasa-images-of-japan.html 
 
Deborah 
_ 
 
Deborah Taylor-Pearce 
d...@she-philosopher.com 
 
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[MapHist] Japan's Reshaped Coastline as Seen From Space

2011-03-15 Thread Deborah Taylor-Pearce

This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the 
whole list)
o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + 



Posted today to the _PBS NewsHour_ blog, "The Rundown":

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/2011/03/nasa-images-of-japan.html


Deborah
_

Deborah Taylor-Pearce
d...@she-philosopher.com

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[MapHist] Places and Spaces :: Maps for 7th Iteration

2011-03-15 Thread J. B. Post
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   More cartogram than traditional maps, can we be comfortable using
"cartogram" to cover these images.  I consider cartograms a map/diagram
where space on the image represents something other than space in the
world.  This "something other" can be relationships,
production/consumption data, and the like.  For me, cybermaps are
cartograms.  Do we need some new meta-term or can "cartogram" suffice as
a category designation? 


   http://scimaps.org/submissions/7-digital_libraries/10maps+quotes.html



   JBP 

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[MapHist] Dictionary of British map engravers (etc.) to 1850 (June 2011): publication announcement

2011-03-15 Thread Francis Herbert
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whole list)
o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + 

The following news has come my way. This ought to actively interest
subscribers to all three lists to which this is now posted; but feel
free, of course, to forward to others.

 

Please note the opening direction: “MAKE SURE ANY MESSAGE GOES TO THE
PUBLISHERS AND IS NOT SENT TO THE ENTIRE LIST[S]”

 

Francis Herbert (who will pay for his own copy!)

francis443herb...@btinternet.com

 

 



DO NOT USE YOUR EMAIL REPLY FUNCTION TO RESPOND TO THIS ANNOUNCEMENT.
MAKE SURE ANY MESSAGE GOES TO THE PUBLISHERS AND IS NOT SENT TO THE
ENTIRE LIST

 

Just announced, to be published in June 2011.

 

‘BRITISH MAP ENGRAVERS : A DICTIONARY OF ENGRAVERS, LITHOGRAPHERS AND
THEIR PRINCIPAL EMPLOYERS TO 1850.’ By Laurence Worms & Ashley
Baynton-Williams

 

An illustrated dictionary of well over 1,500 members of the map-trade in
the British Isles from the beginnings until the mid nineteenth century,
including all the known engravers and lithographers, all the known
globemakers and retailers, the principal mapsellers and publishers, the
key cartographers, the makers of map-based games and puzzles, and
others. Each entry includes a list of published work, the known
biographical facts (in most cases based on fresh and original research),
addresses and dates, details of apprentices, etc., with much previously
unpublished material.

 

Royal 8vo (25cm). Approx. 750pp. Numerous illustrations, including
portraits and trade-cards, apprentice charts, etc. Hardbound.

 

Initially the volume is offered by Subscription, which closes at Easter
2011, after which time the retail price will be £125.

 

Subscription price, for pre-payment:

 

-- One payment of £80, to include free postage and packing world-wide.

-- Two payments of £40, the second plus postage and packing world-wide.

 

All subscribers will be acknowledged in the book.

 

The authors are giving the key-note lecture at the London Map Fair in
June - details at www.londonmapfairs.com -  and copies of the book will
be available there. Also, signed subscription copies can be collected
there, by prior arrangement.

 

Copies can be ordered at:
http://www.ashrare.com/British_map_engravers.html



 

 

 

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