GIS and Cartography: Introduction
Reference map
a map that serves to show the location of features, examples include zoning maps, topographic maps, and street maps.
Legend
graphical device found on a map that explains the meaning of symbols and colors found on a map
North arrow
graphical device on a map used to show the orientation of the map
Cartographer
Map maker
Choropleth map
A kind of thematic map where data is displayed in discrete categories. Its geographic regions are colored, shaded, or patterned in relation to a value.
Tabular Data
Both geographic and attribute data can be expressed in tables, such as a CSV file in MS Excel.
Raster data
Continuous data, or information without hard boundaries or locations.
Thematic map
Designed to convey information pertaining to a specific theme or feature (population, cultural lifestyle, etc.) or phenomena (rainfall, etc.) connected with a geographic area.
"Thick" Maps
Digital maps with annotations, multimedia, pins, paths, polygons, etc.
Visual Hierarchy
Emphasizing certain features of a map above others; leads the user to focus on those elements
Attribute data
Gives additional information about spatial features.
Keyhole Markup Language
KML is a file format used to display geographic data in an Earth browser such as Google Earth. KML uses a tag-based structure with nested elements and attributes and is based on the XML standard.
Vector data
Represented as either points, lines, or polygons. Best for discrete or thematic data, or data with an exact location or hard boundaries.
What is one essential type of data for GIS?
Spatial data
Cartography
The art of creating maps
Scale bar
a graphical device used to represent map scale