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Siberia and Pre-Contact Americas * History of Cartography II

History of Cartography II

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History of Cartography II. Siberia and Pre-Contact Americas. Karelian Petroglyphs. Karelian Petroglyph. Inuit Driftwood Maps. Mojave Rock Map. Red Sky’s Birch bark Migration Scroll. Stela at Izapa ( ca 300 BCE-1 CE). Mapa de Metlatoyuka , 16 th c . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: History of Cartography II

Siberia and Pre-Contact Americas

*History of Cartography II

Page 2: History of Cartography II

*Karelian Petroglyphs

Page 3: History of Cartography II

*Karelian Petroglyph

Page 4: History of Cartography II
Page 5: History of Cartography II
Page 6: History of Cartography II

*Inuit Driftwood Maps

Page 7: History of Cartography II

*Mojave Rock Map

Page 8: History of Cartography II

*Red Sky’s Birch bark Migration

Scroll

Page 9: History of Cartography II

*Stela at Izapa (ca 300 BCE-1 CE)

Page 10: History of Cartography II

*Mapa de Metlatoyuka, 16th c

Page 11: History of Cartography II

*TENOCHTITLAN IN THE CODEX MENDOZA (ca 1541)

Page 12: History of Cartography II

*Mixtec Map of the Apoala Valley in

the Codex Nuttall

Page 13: History of Cartography II

*Map elements

Page 14: History of Cartography II

*Incan Quipu

Page 15: History of Cartography II

*Incan Q

uipu as M

ap

Page 16: History of Cartography II

*Q

uipu as Map

Page 17: History of Cartography II

*A drawing or other representation of the earth's surface or a part of it made on a flat surface, showing the distribution of physical or geographical features (and often also including socio-economic, political, agricultural, meteorological, etc., information), with each point in the representation corresponding to an actual geographical position according to a fixed scale or projection; a similar representation of the positions of stars in the sky, the surface of a planet, or the like. Also: a plan of the form or layout of something, as a route, a building, etc. (OED)

Page 18: History of Cartography II

*graphic representations that facilitate a spatial understanding of things, concepts, conditions, processes or events in the human world' From Harley and Woodward, The History of Cartography (1987)