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Posts by Geoff Wallace

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71% of our planet is ocean, but you wouldn’t know it from traditional maps.

Shift your land-based perspective this Earth Week with a story about the Spilhaus Projection map and the WHOI oceanographer who created it: go.whoi.edu/spilhausmap

17 hours ago 75 35 5 5

Filled out and shared!

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Attention freelance cartographers! The AFC survey is live! Fill it out and empower your colleagues with information about rates, hours, qualifications, and client bases!

#GIS #cartography #maps #freelance #GISchat

2 hours ago 0 0 0 0
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Today I’m excited to finally start a project I’ve been wanting to launch for a long time: Color for #Geoscience. 🎨🌍

ℹ️ to build an open, community‑driven collection of palettes
📄 Contribution: github.com/dominicroye/...
🌐 APP dominicroye.github.io/color-for-ge...

#ScientificVisualization #dataviz

1 month ago 82 26 2 1

eesh

1 month ago 1 2 0 0
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Sunlight (A Good Death), by Malia Rogers track by Malia Rogers

If this profoundly broken world has you down, maybe burst into tears listening to some really good music instead. This is just a profound, beautiful meditation from the nexus of love, grief, and time from @maliarogers.bsky.social. Blew me away. maliarogers.bandcamp.com/track/sunlig...

1 month ago 2 0 0 0
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We're very pleased to say that our newest BCS member is Dr Geoff Wallace, and that his membership marks our 6,000th sign up at the British Cartographic Society since inception in 1963!

If you'd like to feature in our members spotlight series please contact maplines@cartography.org.uk

2 months ago 1 1 0 0

Is there some kind of prize for scoring the epidemiological hat-trick of back-to-back flu, covid, and pneumonia? Asking for a friend with a 2yo in daycare. (And who is on his fourth course of antibiotics in three months.)

2 months ago 2 0 0 0

50 in less than 4 months! It’s good to have work but yikes - that kind of pace would leave me in need of therapy.

2 months ago 1 0 1 0
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Hot take: most maps of the Black Death are outdated and misleading. I made a better one.

#history #GISchat #cartography #map

2 months ago 10 1 0 0

I was very happy to receive this e-mail. Thank you for encouraging our profession to take a stand.

2 months ago 2 0 1 0
An email with black text and a brown background. The link in the post will take you to a text version for screen readers.

An email with black text and a brown background. The link in the post will take you to a text version for screen readers.

Now landing in AFC member inboxes: The Alliance of Freelance Cartographers is calling upon its members to participate in Friday's general strike.

Full text of the email: mailchi.mp/090a9ac7c273...

2 months ago 16 6 2 3

Y'all, having a toddler is no joke. They are just adorable little epidemiological hurricanes. In the last five weeks, I have had pneumonia (twice), strep throat, a skin infection, and viral pinkeye. I spent Christmas bedridden with a 40 degree fever. It's just relentless.

3 months ago 1 0 0 0

I feel seen.

4 months ago 1 0 0 0

If someone clicked on you in an RTS, what would your voice lines be?

“GYAH FUCK quit sneaking up on me!”
“If you could see the muscle that rolls my eyes it’d be a six pack.”
“Look man, we’re all just doing our best.”
“[cough] sorry [cough] daughter in daycare [pukes]”
“TO THE BARRICADES!”

4 months ago 1 1 1 0

It was great fun to make this animation for NiCHE! They were my first environmental history community back in my U of T days and it was a delight and privilege to return their kindness with a nifty map. #envhist #envhum #gischat #cdnhist #histgeog

4 months ago 8 3 0 0

I really should have a totally separate billing item for called “Making me map the Balkans before 2008”. Charge will be $8,000 and a trip to my therapist. #gischat

4 months ago 0 0 0 0

It's #StarTrek Day. I can't overstate how important this franchise was to me growing up and how relevant it remains to me today. But the fact that the weasels at Paramount are profiting from its utopian vision of the future makes my skin crawl. It's also mostly kept me away from the new shows.

7 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Visualizing the History of Connections in the Ancient American Art Galleries - The Metropolitan Museum of Art A new state-of-the-art digital map welcomes and orients visitors upon entering the Ancient American Art galleries.

Hugo Ikehara–Tsukayama, Sofia Ortega-Guerrero, and I wrote an article about our decisions and the production process behind the animated map of the Americas for the Met Museum's Michael C. Rockefeller Wing!

#gischat #history #arthistory #gis #cartography #maps

10 months ago 5 0 0 0
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The second half of the Oceania video is a visualization of the Pacific worldview called "Spheric Oceania" by artist Sean Connelly.

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God this is my whole life

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

Das Map

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I did this for the Yucatán peninsula from 1550 to 1690 in my PhD and even in the tiny number of documents that still exist the depredation of empire was just astonishing. It enrages me when I think of that playing out across a whole empire for centuries. It’s time we started collecting the receipts.

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

A complete dataset of all archival records detailing colonial Spanish taxation/appropriation/forced sale of goods/currency/labour from indigenous communities across the empire from 1500 to 1820. A full accounting of the wealth and work stolen by the colonial project with coordinates. #gischat

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
A map entitled "The Province of Yucatán in the Early Colonial Period" showing the Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico in the seventeenth century. The extent of Spanish control is demarcated as covering the northeastern third of the Peninsula, with both the interior and eastern coast labeled as beyond Spanish colonial influence. The provincial capital of Mérida and the Spanish towns of Campeche in the southwest and Valladolid in the east are labeled, as are prominent Maya towns called "cabeceras," through which the Spanish extended their influence into indigenous society and territory. Major roads criss-cross the region under Spanish control linking major towns and cabeceras together and connecting them to port cities dotted along the coast. The following approximate political regions are prominently: Sahcabchén (extreme southwest), Champotón (far southwest, north of Sahcabchén), Camino Real Alto and Camino Real Bajo (north of Champotón and following the highway from Campeche to Mérida along the western coast), Sierra (along a ridge that extends from northwest to southeast across much of the Peninsula), Costa (the northern central coastal region), Beneficios Bajos (between Sierra and Costa, essentially in the central region of the area under Spanish control), Dzonot (a small district east of Costa and largely uninhabited), Tizimín (in the northeast, east of Costa and Dzonot), Chancenote (the extreme northeastern part of peninsula under Spanish control), Chancenote (south of Tizímin and north of Valladolid), Valladolid (in the central eastern region, named after the eponymous Spanish town), Beneficios altos (south of Valladolid and southeast of Beneficios Bajos), and Bacalar (in the extreme southeast, and abandoned in around 1650). A large uncolonized region called the "Montaña" or Borderlands is also labeled, beginning south of Sierra and extending southwards off the map.

A map entitled "The Province of Yucatán in the Early Colonial Period" showing the Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico in the seventeenth century. The extent of Spanish control is demarcated as covering the northeastern third of the Peninsula, with both the interior and eastern coast labeled as beyond Spanish colonial influence. The provincial capital of Mérida and the Spanish towns of Campeche in the southwest and Valladolid in the east are labeled, as are prominent Maya towns called "cabeceras," through which the Spanish extended their influence into indigenous society and territory. Major roads criss-cross the region under Spanish control linking major towns and cabeceras together and connecting them to port cities dotted along the coast. The following approximate political regions are prominently: Sahcabchén (extreme southwest), Champotón (far southwest, north of Sahcabchén), Camino Real Alto and Camino Real Bajo (north of Champotón and following the highway from Campeche to Mérida along the western coast), Sierra (along a ridge that extends from northwest to southeast across much of the Peninsula), Costa (the northern central coastal region), Beneficios Bajos (between Sierra and Costa, essentially in the central region of the area under Spanish control), Dzonot (a small district east of Costa and largely uninhabited), Tizimín (in the northeast, east of Costa and Dzonot), Chancenote (the extreme northeastern part of peninsula under Spanish control), Chancenote (south of Tizímin and north of Valladolid), Valladolid (in the central eastern region, named after the eponymous Spanish town), Beneficios altos (south of Valladolid and southeast of Beneficios Bajos), and Bacalar (in the extreme southeast, and abandoned in around 1650). A large uncolonized region called the "Montaña" or Borderlands is also labeled, beginning south of Sierra and extending southwards off the map.

Early colonial Yucatán. This map appears in "The Friar and the Maya: Diego de Landa and the Account of the Things of Yucatan" by @restall.bsky.social, Amara Solari, John F. Chuchiak, and Traci Ardren (2023, Univ. Press of Colorado).

#mapmonday #GISchat #history

1 year ago 8 2 1 0
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Bering Bog Bridge? New research rewrites key crossing’s landscape New research finds Bering Land Bridge was boggy with meandering rivers, not an arid steppe as previously thought

AGU put out a press release about our #AGU2024 presentations on the Bering Land Bridge (which, ICYMI is it a massive amount of exposed land during sea level lowstands!)

Check out the teaser below and come see our posters if you are in town! PP23C-0564 to 0569 (Tuesday afternoon)

1 year ago 23 4 0 3
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The Pacific. This map appears as a double-page frontispiece in "Migrant Ecologies: Environmental Histories of the Pacific World" (ed. Beattie, Jones, & Melillo, University of Hawai'i Press, 2022).

#mapmonday #cartography #envhist #GISchat

1 year ago 17 3 0 0

I've struggled to map exactly this multiple times - this projection is a beautiful and elegant solution. Well done!

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

Why didn’t anyone warn me that my dad was here too

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
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Ooooh me! This looks great!

1 year ago 1 0 0 0