How does Peter Pan get to Never Never Land? What trail did
Dorothy take to get to Oz? How do you get to Grandfather's house at Thanksgiving?
Unfortunately only spaceships navigate through the stars, there aren't many yellow brick
roads around, and cars aren't preprogrammed with directions to Grandfather's house.
Instead we count on people like Will Fontanez to tell us how to
get where we want to go. Will manages the Cartographic Services Laboratory at the
University of Tennessee, Knoxville.
Cartographers make maps. According to The Software Toolworks Multimedia Encyclopedia,
the earliest known map was drawn on a small clay tablet in the 3rd millennium BC by the
Sumerians. Early Egyptians drew maps to show property lines because the Nile River flooded
the area every year and washed away the land markers.
Pirates
used maps to find buried treasure.
Because maps of general areas (countries, oceans, and so on) already exist, map makers are
usually asked for maps of specific areas or with certain types of information. For
example, when Tennessee had record-setting rainfalls in March 1994, many areas flooded and
unsafe roads were closed. Like the early Egyptians when the Nile flooded, the National
Park Service asked Will to draw new maps so visitors could navigate around closed roads in
the Smoky Mountains National Park.
When Will gets a map request, he checks his collection of atlases
and computerized maps to find a general outline of the area. Then he finds the latitude and longitude and the projection to be used.
Because the Earth is round and paper is flat, it is hard to draw a map without distorting the shape of the Earth. A map maker decides the type of projection to use based on who will be using the map. Compton's
Interactive Encyclopedia explains the different types of projections as:
Once Will has an outline of the area he fills in the details. Some standard types of maps listed in Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia are:
Maps can be a combination of different types. A physical map may also show outlines of
states, and political maps may show oceans and lakes.
Sometimes maps are made for special occasions. For instance, in honor of the University of
Tennessee's Bicentennial, Will created a 25- by 30-inch color poster featuring a map of
the world with Knoxville as the center. Using Will's map, a person flying an airplane
could find Knoxville from anywhere else in the world.
As you can see, without maps and mapmakers like Will Fontanez and the UTK Cartographic
Services Laboratory, we would truly be lost.
Mapmaker Crossword Puzzle - print it out and pass it around.
Suggested reading list and other WWW resources
Other UT Science Bytes articles
The University of Tennessee, Knoxville