Relief
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| − | + | [[Main Page]] > [[Metadata Schema]] > Describing Relief in Maps | |
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From the earliest maps to the present, mapmakers have relied on a variety of methods, symbols, and designations to address the challenging task of illustrating the three-dimensional aspects of a location using a flat, two-dimensional map. | From the earliest maps to the present, mapmakers have relied on a variety of methods, symbols, and designations to address the challenging task of illustrating the three-dimensional aspects of a location using a flat, two-dimensional map. | ||
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|pictorial | |pictorial | ||
|hachures | |hachures | ||
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|landform drawing | |landform drawing | ||
| + | |- | ||
|gradient tints | |gradient tints | ||
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|rock drawing | |rock drawing | ||
|form lines | |form lines | ||
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|contours | |contours | ||
|spot heights | |spot heights | ||
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|soundings | |soundings | ||
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|- | |- | ||
| + | |stippling | ||
| + | |hypsometric tints | ||
|bathymetric tints | |bathymetric tints | ||
| − | |||
|- | |- | ||
| + | |hill shading | ||
|satellite imagery | |satellite imagery | ||
|} | |} | ||
| − | The forms of relief used most often on early North Carolina maps are '''pictorial''', '''hachures''', and '''soundings'''. Beginning in the mid to late 19th-century, North Carolina mapmakers began to use additional methods for showing relief, including '''contours''', ''' | + | The forms of relief used most often on early North Carolina maps are '''pictorial''', '''hachures''', and '''soundings'''. Beginning in the mid to late 19th-century, North Carolina mapmakers began to use additional methods for showing relief, including '''contours''', '''stippling''', and '''spot heights.''' The examples below show illustrations of each method. |
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On many early maps of North Carolina and the southeast, topography is illustrated simply by drawings of mountains and hills. Early explorers were clearly aware that there was a large mountain chain several hundred miles to the west of the coast, but the maps they produced show that there was at the time very little additional information. | On many early maps of North Carolina and the southeast, topography is illustrated simply by drawings of mountains and hills. Early explorers were clearly aware that there was a large mountain chain several hundred miles to the west of the coast, but the maps they produced show that there was at the time very little additional information. | ||
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{| cellpadding="8" | {| cellpadding="8" | ||
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| − | ==== | + | ====Depths Shown by Soundings==== |
| − | + | Soundings are numbers designating the depth of water at a specific place. These appear regularly on very early maps, and were especially important to sailors navigating the treacherous waters off of the Outer Banks. While that area is primarily where soundings are to be found on historic maps of North Carolina, soundings occasionally appear on inland waters. | |
{| cellpadding="8" | {| cellpadding="8" | ||
| − | | [[Image: | + | | [[Image:Soundings_Cm912m_U58a3_1860.jpg|thumb|Detail from "Albemarle Sound, N. Carolina: western part, from the Pasquotank River to the Roanoke and Chowan rivers." NCC call number Cm912m U58a3 1860.]] |
| − | | [[Image: | + | | [[Image:Soundings_MC_150_1685w.jpg|thumb|Detail from "A New Map of Carolina Sold by Geo: Willdey at the Great Toy, Spectacle, China-ware and Print Shop, ye Corner of Ludgate Street near St. Pauls London," 1685. NC Archives call number MC.150.1685w.]] |
|} | |} | ||
| + | ---- | ||
| + | ====Depths Shown by Stippling==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Stippling uses small dots to indicate changes in depth, with a denser concentration of dots (or darker dots) indicating shallower waters. This method appears in various nautical maps, often alongside soundings. Like soundings, stippling appears most often in maps showing the waters off the North Carolina coast, but also appears in some maps of sounds and rivers. | ||
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| + | {| cellpadding="8" | ||
| + | | [[Image:stippling_Cm912m_U58a1_1913.jpg|thumb|Detail from "United States--east coast, North Carolina: Albemarle Sound," 1913. NCC call number Cm912m U58a1 1913.]] | ||
| + | | [[Image:stippling_Cm912m_U58cu4.jpg|thumb|Detail from "Virginia-North Carolina, Back Bay Quadrangle," 1920. NCC call number Cm912m U58cu4.]] | ||
| + | |} | ||
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| + | ====Relief Shown by Contours==== | ||
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| + | Contour lines designate changes in elevation. Elevation numbers are given at intervals, with the lines appearing concentrically in order to show the changes in elevation in a given area. Contours are not limited to the mountainous western parts of the state, and are often used to show elevation in low-lying areas in the east. | ||
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| + | {| cellpadding="8" | ||
| + | | [[Image:Contours_MC_041_1929d.jpg|thumb|Detail from "Soil map, North Carolina, Gates County sheet," 1929. NC Archives call number MC.041.1929d.]] | ||
| + | |} | ||
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| + | ---- | ||
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====Relief Shown by Spot Heights==== | ====Relief Shown by Spot Heights==== | ||
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| [[Image:Spot_heights_MC_007_1938n.jpg|thumb|Detail from "Avery County, North Carolina (State Highway and Public Works Commission)," 1938. NC Archives call number MC.007.1938n.]] | | [[Image:Spot_heights_MC_007_1938n.jpg|thumb|Detail from "Avery County, North Carolina (State Highway and Public Works Commission)," 1938. NC Archives call number MC.007.1938n.]] | ||
|} | |} | ||
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| + | [[Category:Metadata]] | ||
| + | [[Category:Index]] | ||
Latest revision as of 08:46, 1 June 2009
Main Page > Metadata Schema > Describing Relief in Maps
From the earliest maps to the present, mapmakers have relied on a variety of methods, symbols, and designations to address the challenging task of illustrating the three-dimensional aspects of a location using a flat, two-dimensional map.
AACR2 recognizes many different ways of portraying relief, including
pictorial hachures landform drawing gradient tints rock drawing form lines contours spot heights soundings stippling hypsometric tints bathymetric tints hill shading satellite imagery
The forms of relief used most often on early North Carolina maps are pictorial, hachures, and soundings. Beginning in the mid to late 19th-century, North Carolina mapmakers began to use additional methods for showing relief, including contours, stippling, and spot heights. The examples below show illustrations of each method.
Contents |
Relief Shown Pictorially
On many early maps of North Carolina and the southeast, topography is illustrated simply by drawings of mountains and hills. Early explorers were clearly aware that there was a large mountain chain several hundred miles to the west of the coast, but the maps they produced show that there was at the time very little additional information.
Relief Shown by Hachures
Hachures, defined as "short lines following the direction of maximum slope" (AACR2 Cartographic Materials, 2002) are probably the most common method for showing relief on historic maps of North Carolina. Hachures often designate specific mountains or hills, and are effective at showing variations in elevation, but they still do not convey as much information as numbered relief methods, such as contours and spot heights.
Depths Shown by Soundings
Soundings are numbers designating the depth of water at a specific place. These appear regularly on very early maps, and were especially important to sailors navigating the treacherous waters off of the Outer Banks. While that area is primarily where soundings are to be found on historic maps of North Carolina, soundings occasionally appear on inland waters.
Depths Shown by Stippling
Stippling uses small dots to indicate changes in depth, with a denser concentration of dots (or darker dots) indicating shallower waters. This method appears in various nautical maps, often alongside soundings. Like soundings, stippling appears most often in maps showing the waters off the North Carolina coast, but also appears in some maps of sounds and rivers.
Relief Shown by Contours
Contour lines designate changes in elevation. Elevation numbers are given at intervals, with the lines appearing concentrically in order to show the changes in elevation in a given area. Contours are not limited to the mountainous western parts of the state, and are often used to show elevation in low-lying areas in the east.
Relief Shown by Spot Heights
Spot heights are simply numbers on or near a location giving the elevation for that place. Some maps use spot heights regularly throughout the area shown, but they are most often used just for large mountains or hills. In many maps of North Carolina, spot heights are given only for the highest peaks (such as Mt. Mitchell and Clingman's Dome).










