View allAll Photos Tagged mapping,
This is a collection of images, infographics, visualization, maps... reached on Internet. Here the list of link for each visualization:
Emotional Cartography by Christian Nold
Hurricane tracker by Stamen
Cabspotting by Stamen
Is that enough?
20150513-DSC08988
東京ディズニーランド/Tokyo Disneyland Tokyo Disny Land
プロジェクションマッピング Projection Mapping Once Upon a Time - Disney on Classic Ver
The latest Mars image mosaic as seen through the lens of the High Resolution Stereo Camera on ESA’s Mars Express.
The mosaic comprises 2702 individual swaths of the martian surface, up to and including the spacecraft’s 10 821st orbit of the planet, which it completed on 30 June 2012.
In total, 87.8% of the surface has been mapped at any resolution, with 61.5% mapped at a resolution of 20 m per pixel or better.
Each white marker around the border of the image represents 10º of latitude or longitude.
For more information, and a much higher resolution of this image please click here.
Credits: ESA/DLR/FU Berlin (G. Neukum); images processed by F. Jansen (ESA).
Mapping Places graphic available for download at dryicons.com/free-graphics/preview/mapping-places/ in EPS (vector) format.
View similar vector graphics at DryIcons Graphics.
During the Mountains in the Deep: Exploring the Central Pacific Basin expedition, the NOAA Ocean Exploration mapping team collected multibeam bathymetry on this seamount that is nearly 4,200 meters (~13,800-feet) high. They dubbed the seamount "Kahalewai" after Carl Kahalewai, who was one of the initial colonists of the islands of Howland, Baker, and Jarvis; along with several other Hawaiians, Kahalewai’s successful year‐long occupation of the islands enabled President Roosevelt to issue Executive Order 7368 on May 13, 1936, proclaiming that the islands of Howland, Baker, and Jarvis were under the jurisdiction of the United States.
This seamount turned out to rise about 1,000 meters (3,000 feet) higher from the abyssal plain than what was expected from existing altimetry data. This discovery is another reminder about the importance of high-resolution bathymetric mapping. We have higher-resolution maps of the surface of Mars than we do of the underwater surface of our own planet. Data like these fill large gaps in our knowledge and give us a better understanding of the world we live in.
This image was featured as our September 15, 2021, Image of the Day. For the full gallery, visit oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/multimedia/daily-image/welcome.html.
Image courtesy of NOAA Ocean Exploration, Mountains in the Deep: Exploring the Central Pacific Basin.
Reenactment Day at Constitution Island along the Hudson River between West Point Military Academy and Cold Spring, NY
We have a subscription to the National Geographic magazine and this is a map that accompanied an article on the Russian war against Ukraine.
The Slocum Creek Wilderness Study Area (WSA) is located east of Owyhee Reservoir in Malheur County, approximately 47 miles south of Vale. U.S. Highway 95 is approximately 30 miles to the southeast. The WSA includes 7,600 acres of Bureau of Land Management (BLM) land. It is pear-shaped, approximately 5.5 miles long and 3 miles wide. It is bounded by high standard, gravel Leslie Gulch road on the north; by private land and maintained dirt roads on the east, south, and west; and by Bureau of Reclamation land on the northwest. It is adjacent to the Honeycombs and Upper Leslie Gulch WSAs and separated from them by high standard or maintained dirt roads.
The WSA contains rugged topography formed by intermittent streams cutting through thick, volcanic deposits. The resulting land pattern is composed of steep-sided drainages separated by high, north-south oriented ridges. Over 85 percent of the WSA has gradients exceeding 25 percent. Natural vegetation consists mostly of sagebrush and bunchgrass. Western junipers are scattered throughout the WSA. A small, relict stand of ponderosa pine is located in the Dago Gulch drainage of the WSA. Approximately 200 California bighorn sheep occupy habitat east of the Owyhee Reservoir. The WSA accounts for about 75 of the herd.
The WSA was studied under Section 603 of the Federal Land Policy and Management Act and was included in the Final Oregon Wilderness Environmental Impact Statement filed in February 1990.
www.blm.gov/programs/national-conservation-lands/oregon-w...
The shot
Camera: Canon EOS 450D
Lens: Tamron 17-50mm
Filters: ND8 Filter
Exif: 3,2sec · f9 · 17mm · ISO 200
Processing :
HDR from a single RAW in Lightroom
Tone Mapping using details enhancer in Photomatix
Postprocess in Photoshop
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ver donde se tomó. (See where this picture was taken)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Más MARINAS ( More SEASCAPES )
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Por favor, no use esta imagen en páginas web, blogs ni nigún otro medio sin mi permiso explícito. © Todos los derechos reservados.
(Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved )
Inlet to mobile CO2 Sensor on roof of car. This system is using the prototype DIYSCO2 sensor on car-sharing vehicles. Photo by Andreas Christen, UBC.
Part of album Urban CO2 Emission Mapping.
This method to map carbon dioxide emissions using mobile sensors on vehicles is described in: Lee J.K., Christen A., Ketler R., Nesic Z. (2017): 'A mobile sensor network to map carbon dioxide emissions in urban environments'. Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, doi:10.5194/amt-2016-200.
Testing mobile mapping of carbon-dixoide (CO2) in cities using the prototype DIYSCO2 sensor on car-sharing vehicles.
Part of album Urban CO2 Emission Mapping.
This method to map carbon dioxide emissions using mobile sensors on vehicles is described in: Lee J.K., Christen A., Ketler R., Nesic Z. (2017): 'A mobile sensor network to map carbon dioxide emissions in urban environments'. Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, doi:10.5194/amt-2016-200.
Try Mind Mapping Mini Promotional Pack
PDF and Word versions available which include an A4 poster, A5 Big Bookmarks with space to make notes, perhaps even for adding keywords if a Mind Map is going to be created of a book, standard Bookmarks, plus a postcard sized version. The Big Bookmarks are really handy; I wonder why more Bookmarks aren’t made this size?
This pack makes it easy for you to hand details of Mind Mapping to friends, family and colleagues.
Visit www.mindmapinspiration.co.uk to download the FREE mini promo pack
Mind Map Inspiration Blog www.mindmapinspiration.com
This information graphic is the result of a five-day intensive project at the Willem de Kooning Academie in Rotterdam.
This is a zerox of an ancient body map illustration from an old book called Mapping The Body by Mark Kidel and Susan Rowe-Leete. It shows the hundreds of energy points running through the human body.
I used to use images of the body in much of my art and did a lot of research around that. In this case, I used this body map to help illustrate the chakra system as part of the Great Round series, a year-long series on mandalas on red Ravine. See details in the links.
Minneapolis, Minnesota, July 2008
Field Number: IMG_13305
full posts on redravine.wordpress.com
Testing mobile mapping of carbon-dixoide (CO2) in cities using the prototype DIYSCO2 sensor on car-sharing vehicles. Carbon dioxide is measured using the tubes on the roofs. Photo: Andreas Christen, UBC.
Part of album Urban CO2 Emission Mapping.
This method to map carbon dioxide emissions using mobile sensors on vehicles is described in: Lee J.K., Christen A., Ketler R., Nesic Z. (2017): 'A mobile sensor network to map carbon dioxide emissions in urban environments'. Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, doi:10.5194/amt-2016-200.
Watercolor on Paper, 2018, 12"x9".
To purchase, click here.
How do you map a place you have only heard of, but have never seen? Each year I lose my way as an artist. Painting Albuquerque as a new year exercise seemed an appropriate way to start the year after being away from painting for far too long.
I'd like to visit Albuquerque. The first time I heard the word was when Bugs Bunny popped out of his rabbit hole on his way to somewhere else. It always seemed unfair that some place should be famous to me because a cartoon got there by accident. Even as a child, I sensed this injustice. If you look at a map of Albuquerque, it's in the middle of two cross hairs (State Routes 40 and 25) across a land mass that is 121,697 square miles, if you agree with the map.
It is said that Old Albuquerque dates to 1706 when Sir Francisco Cuervo y Valdés showed up. I prefer to think that the Zia deserve credit. The Zia Sun Sign is a symbol originated with the Indians of Zia, an ancient Pueblo (Indian village) 35 miles northwest of Albuquerque. The symbol has sacred meaning to the Zia. Four is a sacred number which symbolizes the Circle of Life: four winds, four seasons, four directions, and four sacred obligations. There appear to be four different ways to go from the center of Albuquerque.
In this painting, there is a shell that grows and vibrates like a beating heart in the center of what Albuquerque looks like in my imagination. I hope it's as pretty as I imagine when I go there some day.