November 18, 2008

sebast.gifSabastian Cabot, (1474? - 1557?) Explorer, Cartographer and Navigator during the age of discovery.  During his life Sabastian Cabot was employed by England and Spain to find the Northwest Passage and a way to China.

By 1512 Sebastian was employed by Henry VIII as a cartographer at Greenwich.

About 1525, he received the rank of captain general from Spain.  He began a trip with four ships and 200 men around the world (1526-1529) that was supposed to sail to China and the
Moluccas (the Spice Islands, in Indonesia).  Upon landing in Brazil, however, rumors of the wealth of the Incan king and the nearly-successful expedition of Aleixo Garcia caused Cabot to abandon his charge and instead further explore the interior of the Río de la Plata (a river between Argentina and Uruguay in South America).

All that remains of his personal work, (the account he wrote of his journeys has been lost), is a map of the new world drawn in 1544; one copy of this was found in Bavaria, and is still preserved in the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris, where it still remains.

Present day world globes and maps have a rich history of courage exhibited by explorers like Sebastian Cabot.

November 11, 2008

Gleaming Glass In Your Home

Author: SpinningGlobe
yhst-98200314156754_2081_18349847.jpeg

When many people think of globes they imagine the cheap, light-blue variety often found in elementary school maps and globes classes. It’s easy to understand why people wouldn’t want to include globes of this type in their home décor. Many people prefer more elegant and expensive knick knacks.Despite their often plain appearance globes can be useful in a home. When you’re reading a newspaper article that mentions a foreign country unfamiliar to you for example, you may find it beneficial to look at a globe to find the location. Glass globes provide that finished exterior than many people prefer. Gleaming glass globes fit in well with most interior design schemes and give the home a “worldly” touch.

November 11, 2008

Get Kids Familiar With The World

Author: SpinningGlobe
Get Kids Familiar With The World

It’s pretty comical that in a country that labels itself “the super power of the world,” less than 40% of 18 to 24-year-olds can point out Iraq on a map of the Middle East. More than 30% of young Americans don’t understand time zone differences and two-thirds of this population can’t find Louisiana on a U.S. world map. Some may say Americans’ lack of geographical knowledge is due to decreased teaching of the subject in schools, while others might believe parents should be responsible for teaching their kids about the globe.It doesn’t matter which one of these opinions is true, it only matters that some type of action is taken to teach kids about the world map. Parents should give their kids the tools they need to understand world locations. Inflatable globes can make learning fun. Parents can point out world locations to kids while tossing the ball back and forth.

November 11, 2008

Martin Waldseemüller

Author: globeguy

globsm2.jpeg“Martin Waldseemüller was a German cartogrpher best known for his Universalis Cosmographia, a 12-sheet woodblock map dated 1507.  Not only was it one of the first maps to precisely chart latitude and longitude, but it also marked the first time the name “America” was used, referring to South America and honoring Amerigo Vespucci.”1   In 1525 Waldseemüller appears to have had second thoughts about the name, in his reworking of the Ptolemy atlas, the continent is labelled simply Terra Incognita (unkown land).  But despite the revision, 1,000 copies of the world map had been distributed and the original suggestion 311.jpegtook hold.  Four copies of the globular map survive in the form of “gores”: printed maps that were intended to be cut out and pasted onto a ball. Only one of these lies in the Americas today, residing at the James Ford Bell Library, University of Minnesota.

1 Replogle GlobesAge of Exploration

November 11, 2008

Map Gores

Author: globeguy

A gore is a segment of a three-dimensional  shape fabricated from a two-dimensional material.  Globes of the Earth were first mass produced by Gerard Mercator using a process of printing map details on 12 paper gores that were cut out then pasted to a sphere.  Also as seen below are samples of a 6 map gores. The first one is an early 1500’s map gore, the second picture is a modern digital map gore of the earth now used to make the Earthball.ingolstadt21.jpeg 6gorez1.gif 

November 8, 2008

800px-globes_de_coronelli.jpegVincenzo Coronelli, born in Venice in 1650, is regarded as one of Italy’s finest cartographers.  Coronelli was a cleric and encyclopedist with a particular interest in geography and cartography. He was author of more than 140 titles and produced several hundred maps.   As Royal Cartographer to King Louis XIV, Coronelli was granted access to the latest documentation sent from the colonies to the French Academy of Sciences.  His globe gores were produced to be assembled into spherical form and sold as complete globes, rare examples were kept aside to be published in sheet form.  Coronelli’s considerable works represented the pinnacle of geographic knowledge of the world in the late 17th century.

November 8, 2008

Age of Discovery

Author: globeguy

Cartographers and explorers worked together  in mapping out the world during the times of exploration.  Henry the Navigator (1394 – 1460),  the second son of King John I of Portugal set up a school at Sagres for sailors to learn the secrets of the ocean.  He paid for many sailing expeditions out of the Portuguese treasury.  Henry employed cartographers who created the most sophisticated maps of their time.  In 1419 he summoned Jehuda Cresques a noted cartographer to map the discoveries of his sailors.  The maps made it possible for sailors to learn from previous expeditions.

 1240-004-52f524b3.gifAs a fruit of Prince Henry’s work João Gonçalves Zarco, Bartolomeu Perestrelo and Tristão Vaz Teixeira rediscovered the Madeira Islands in 1420, and at Henry’s instigation Portuguese settlers colonized the islands.  In 1427, one of Henry’s navigators, probably Gonçalo Velho, discovered the Azores.  Portugal soon colonized these islands in 1430.  Gil Eanes, the commander of one of Henry’s expeditions, became the first European known to pass Cape Bojador in 1434.  This was a breakthrough as it was considered close to the end of the world, with difficult currents that did not encourage commercial enterprise.  Alvise Cadamosto was one of the sailors hired by Prince Henry to explore the Atlantic coast of Africa and he discovered several islands of the Cape Verde archipelago between 1455 and 1456.  In his first voyage, which started on March 22 1455, he visited the Madeira Islands and the Canary Islands.  On the second voyage, in 1456,  Cadamosto became the first European to reach the Cape Verde Islands.

October 30, 2008

50 state maps

Author: SpinningGlobe
state-maps

When learning about the different states of the United States, it is important that the students have a clear grasp of geography. With 50 state maps, students will have a more vivid picture of the different states, counties and landmarks. A map will give them a broader understanding of the United States and its different economic and political divisions.

Maps can tell you about the neighboring states, the bodies of water surrounding them, if any, and other natural features such as mountains or rivers. A state map can also show historical points of interest. It can also identify major roads and highways.

October 30, 2008

Gemstone world globes

Author: SpinningGlobe
lapis-gemstone-world-globes

Year after year, companies think of something new and unique to give out to their loyal clients. These items could be anything from personalized pens, to umbrellas and mobile phone holders. It has been a tradition to give out tokens of appreciation to clients as a way of maintaining a bond with them.

For a change, why not give gemstone world globes? These paperweights make great corporate giveaways because they are handcrafted and are made of hand-cut semi-precious stones. Each globe is unique as the colors, depending on the gemstones used, may vary.

October 30, 2008

 

Wall MapIn using a flat surface map of the earth  for research, we must remember it limits our perspective of the true view of how the earth looks as to where we are going or what we are doing.

Do we have the tendency to get out our atlas, get on the internet, or do we get the world globe out that should be in our home? Maybe we should do all three.    Acccording to F. WEBSTER McBRYDE, Department of Geography at Ohio State University, if we limit ourselves to just the flat surface map, atlas or internet, we do not get an accurate perspective of the world.

In his article “A MAP OF THE WORLD IN PERSPECTIVE1

In representing the earth’s spherical surface upon a plane, any map projection must inevitably involve some distortion, which increases with the size of the area included. A world projection, developing the grid of the entire earth, therefore, presents maximum difficulty in overcoming distortions. The principal properties which may be preserved on the map, as they are on the earth, may be listed as follows: (1) equivalence, or true relative sizes of areas; (2) conformality or true angles formed by intersecting lines (compass directions, if grid lines are straight, as on the Mercator projection); (3) true shapes of areas; (4) equidistance, or true scale, along certain lines; (5) continuity of surface, with the grid unbroken. Preservation of all of these at once is possible only on the globe.  On a flat surface one or several of the properties may be kept, but there is always a sacrifice.”

{1}The figurative rather than literal interpretation of this word is intended, for obviously the entire earth surface cannot be shown in true perspective. The orthographic hemispherical projection is the only true perspective representation.

Globe and Atlas

Therefore can we say we don’t need a globe in our home for study or the world globe is ”no longer needed in the classroom”?