Category Archives: geography

Matt and his dancing antics, back again

These videos  of Matt dancing around the world, in 20052006 and especially the 2008 one, have made me smile, laugh, and yearn to hold on to that sense of feeling at one with humanity. The imagery, the music from the 2008 one, the  vicarious and jealous thrill I felt at someone having the carefree opportunity to visit such places. If we only saw 2 or 3 seconds of a trip to a country, surely there were more than 2 or 3 days that we didn’t?

The 2012 version is now out, and I’m enjoying it as much as the rest.

I learned from Neatorama about the mini-history that Ethan Zuckerman had written for Matt’s videos. Intriguing was the story of the 2008 score which I’ve always adored. I shall purchase a (legal) copy of it, once my sleeping teenagers and their friends vacate the family room and allow me access to the computer with its master music library.

Linking geography to culture through language: does shape matter?

The first geography course I ever took was Political Geography, in 1987 (taught by Ron Leibowitz, who has since left the geography classroom in favor of administrative duties). The class changed the trajectory of my academic life and left a tremendous impression on me, introducing me to ideas and theories that I’d never considered before.  I remember writing a paper on Finlandization and gaining great insights in the actions of the Soviet Union, a topic of particular relevance in the ’80s.

Then sometime in the last decade I read Jared Diamond’s Guns, Germs, and Steel, and was again struck my his arguments about the role of physical geography in affecting social dynamics and development, and political infrastructure.  Plus it was great fodder for collegial discussion with our anthropology and political science friends, who respectfully disagreed with all of the premises.

Yesterday I caught up on blog reading and came across this recent Nature article about country shapes and languages.  The study suggests that long and narrow countries that span across many latitudes (like Chile) have been able to maintain greater linguistic diversity than countries broader and which cross greater longitudes (like Turkey). Of course, there are a finite number of countries suitable to test, and by treating the countries as “independent” samples in this case, we raise other issues. Every country has its own internal geographies that affect cultural development, plus individual histories and situations (or not) amongst neighbors that cannot be ignored. Plus, I agree that language may be a weak proxy for culture, though it’s a place to start.  Quantifiable measures of culture are, by definition, ambiguous and complicated, and capturing this for map use is an ongoing challenge.

Still, I appreciate the study and will keep track of it for our ongoing effort to provide evidence of geography’s import.

I continue to work on my Mapping People Visual Library Catalog, which one day may inspire new directions for social and cultural mapping.

H/t to Cultural Geography for the Nature article.

California Geographic Alliance, spatial reasoning article, new website

The California Geographic Alliance (CGA) has released its April newsletter, and in it I wrote an item about spatial reasoning.  CGA has been active on Facebook too.  Their old website still has other resources up, as they transition to the new one.  Geographic Alliances are organizations that exist in every state, though some are more actives than others.  Originally launched by National Geography and still strongly associated with them, they’re frequently a great source of professional development for geography teachers.  So is our online program in spatial literacy at the University of Redlands!

diving right into participatory mapping

A recent blog entry by my friend Meg Stewart reminded me of the work that Aly DeGraff is doing in the Grenadines.  I remember hearing about Aly a few years ago. We both went to Middlebury College (go Panthers!), where colleagues of mine in the geography department talked about her skills and motivation as she went through her years there.

Aly is now finishing up her year-long program of participatory mapping in the Grenadines.  After catching up on her blog entries, I just have to say that I’m really impressed with the focus, professionalism, and confidence with which she’s pursuing this work. I haven’t done much mapping of this type myself, but my little forays as part of projects and workshops over the years have clearly shown me that one must accept the process even more than the product as a metric of success.  I also know that I *never* could have done this type of work on my own at that age, even with the help of a mentor.  Kudos to the Compton Foundation for funding these projects.  Go, Aly, go!

Projects like these also remind me of geodesign processes, which I’ve thought a lot more about in the last year since I helped to edit Carl Steinitz’s forthcoming Esri Press book on A Framework for Geodesign.  Participation from “the people of the place” are a defining characteristic of geodesign, and how that’s implemented looks different in every situation. The case studies in Carl’s book range along a spectrum of size and scale, but all involved larger support teams than Aly’s work.  Another reason which I find her progress so enjoyable and remarkable.

observing and representing migratory patterns

I came across two sites this week that used maps in well-designed ways to visualize migratory patterns.  I have an ongoing interest in finding clever and innovative ways to represent flow and movement.

The first was Geo-Mexico, and I first saw their simple-but-elegantly-effective Flash-based maps to link individual Mexican states to the areas in the US, based on registering with consulates.  Then I remembered helping my colleague Steve to map remittances so I smiled when I saw this nice overview and a lesson to boot! I’ll definitely follow this site more. Hat tip to Seth Dixon’s Geography Education for the find.

Much more mesmerizing are these animated maps of annual bird movements, from my local-but-still-unknown Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society.  I’m not a birder myself and have great respect for those who can differentiate more than from amongst crows and starlings (i.e., my skill level). I checked out the patterns of birds whose names suggested they know their home, like the Kentucky Warbler and the Louisiana Waterthrush (what’s up with that little patch in southwestern South Dakota in April/May?  a particularly active citizen-science group or an interesting modeled anomaly?).  I love how the Indigo Bunting aligns with the Mississippi in July and August.  These maps represent the results of models: they don’t reflect actual observations at all of those locations. But they do show the power of visualization when ground truthed, primary data are combined with our large collections of other geospatial information.

What’s up with north on top?

The north-upness of maps is a curiosity that geographers and cartographers have perpetuated for many years, and pondered as well.  It’s interesting to think about this from the historical perspectives (like when the East prevailed) as well as the psychological outcomes of this tendency.

In my Foundations of Spatial Literacy course, we’re talking about egocentric and allocentric perspectives this week.  If you’re an iPhone user, don’t forget that you have the capability to modify your mapping perspective!   North need not always be up!  Though I do love it when I hand my phone to my kids in the car for navigating our directions and I hear their brains working to convert the perspective to whether I’m to turn right or left.  The little blue blinking dot, àla Marauder’s map, would make my top 10 favorite technological developments of the decade.

Northness is one of Kristi Alvarez’s favorite map and geography tid-bits.  More than once she teased me for being north/up-centric.  Bless your solid geographical sense, Kristi, and all of the learning that you have inspired in me. I miss you.

photographic scenes from America via Street View

Doug Rickard spent almost two years scanning through Google’s collection of “Street View” images and selected out thousands, some of which are now being shown in an exhibit at MoMA.   At first I was a bit skeptical – having “your” photos exhibited when you yourself didn’t actually create the images. You created the collection.  But the MoMA intro does explain that he mosaiced and manipulated the images, so there was creative production work on his part too. I can think of parallels with other types of artists and “found objects,” but this idea is new to me for photography.

more evidence that Americans aren’t curious about the world around us

The US versions of Time and Newsweek often have different cover/lead stories from what the international versions have, suggesting that the publishers think that US readers won’t buy as many magazines with those other cover stories.  Or do they already know that?    http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2011/12/02/american-vs-international-news-time-and-newsweek/.   Insights into the national lack of curiosity about the world around us?

finding meaning in borders, edges, frontiers, and boundaries

I happened across this NYT opinion piece today on borders. It’s by Frank Jacobs, the esteemed blogger from Strange Maps.  It’d be nearly impossible to keep track of historical European “national” boundaries without mapped representations.

Staying fixed in one location, but having that one location be considered different places over time, reminded me of the research into how and when children develop their sense of nested or hierarchical space.  That I am in Ithaca and New York and the United States, all at the same time. And that I can be a concurrent Ithacan and New Yorker and United Statesian (sometimes I resist American).  Piaget and Weil studied this for Swiss children.

Piaget, J., & Weil, A.-M. (1951). The development in children of the idea of the homeland and of relations with other countries. International Social Science Bulletin, 3, 571-578.

The NYT piece also reminded me of Edward Casey‘s musings about fixed borders and porous boundaries. I heard him speak once at Redlands and was captivated at a philosopher’s take on the topic.  I would have loved the time to sit down with him in front of a GIS and muse on its points, lines, and polygons.

Here’s a link to his Edges and the In-Between essay (pdf).

Census data, a traditional approach to US social information

If you’re looking to map people across the US, there is no source of information with as much comprehensive coverage at the Census data. Of course it might not be the type of information you want, but you’ll have to take that up with Congress.

Meanwhile, here are a couple of sources for it:

American Fact Finder, info from the source itself.  Be brave and dive in.

Social Explorer, a long-time favorite, especially if you just want to LOOK at Census maps.

the National Historical Geographic Information System. A funny name for what it is: a good source for raw historical data.  Plus the only source I know of for historical boundary files.