Comments and news about Environmental Planning and Design. Intended for all audiences including students and alumni of the Rutgers major of Environmental Planning and Design.
16 November 2011
What do you do when the map is wrong?
One of the big changes in cartography is the ease with which corrections can be made, as is now being shown in the corrections to Greenland that are being made in the Times Atlas of the World in response to the recent climate change cartocontroversy.
Director of SEBS General Honors Program and Professor of Landscape Architecture in Rutgers’ School of Environmental and Biological Sciences and Associate Director of the Grant F. Walton Center for Remote Sensing and Spatial Analysis. Dr. Tulloch can be reached at tulloch[at]crssa.rutgers.edu
Research online at:
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0692-9190
https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=lOLIQZ8AAAAJ&hl=en
https://crssa.rutgers.edu/projects/geohealth/
The blog currently allows open commenting on posts as a way of creating discussion and dialogue. Please keep comments clean, civil and relevant. Places and Spaces reserves the right to delete all comments, particularly those that are unverified, mean-spirited or undermining the pedagogic intent of the blog.
3 comments:
"We don't need no stink' maps!"
Chris Christie (State Plan, page 1)
oops!
That "stinkin' '"
I call my dad :))
Post a Comment