vol.062:The Map That Changed the World
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The provided text offers a comprehensive analysis of the historical development and impact of world map projection techniques leading up to the 20th century. It primarily focuses on the Mercator Projection, explaining its revolutionary contribution to nautical navigation due to its angle-preserving (conformal) and rhumb-line-straightening properties, which were crucial for the Age of Discovery. However, the source extensively details the Mercator projection's critical flaw: its severe area distortion, particularly at high latitudes, which fostered a Eurocentric worldview by visually exaggerating the size of northern continents like Europe. Furthermore, the analysis explores several subsequent equal-area and conformal map projections―including those by Sanson, Lambert, and Mollweide―which were developed to address the limitations of Mercator, demonstrating the evolving demands of cartography. Finally, the text stresses the profound and often negative role map technology played as a tool for colonial expansion, resource exploitation, and administrative control, shaping the modern global geopolitical order.