Nice. The design was heavily influenced by the work of the much under appreciated Richard Harrison Edes whose wartime maps showed US citizens how close they were to the war.
Nice. The design was heavily influenced by the work of the much under appreciated Richard Harrison Edes whose wartime maps showed US citizens how close they were to the war.
Themed versions of old fashioned strip maps. Nice!
I was surprised at the number of fellow #sussexmappers on Bluesky who share an obvious interest in my home county: Sussex. Please don't stop sharing just because the challenge is over for another year. Well done to all who participated in this year's #30daymapchallenge.
I'd like to thank those who liked and commented on my maps. I am in awe of those who work with GIS tools regularly to produce the stunning works I've seen on display - I will be revisiting some of those over the next month.
I've had two attempts to complete the #30daymapchallenge since I took up making maps as a hobby during the pandemic. I've never really come close. I took three years off (helpful: to bank a few maps) and for the rest: some determined time planning needed. I'm very happy to have made it to day 30.
#30daymapchallenge Day 30: Makeover. A deeper look at one area of my Day 16, Sediment Cell Map - at a national level. The movement, processes and materials that are endlessly occurring on my local beach. Before I made this map I was curious - now I know!
#30daymapchallenge Day 29: Raster. Lake Bosumtwi. Not the first time I've mapped this asteroid crater lake in Ghana - I'm still fascinated by its half spherical shape.
😄 I didn't think of that. I did think about Gulf of M***** and New M***** instead. The A****** gave me more to redact. It also made me realise that, just maybe, you can get greedy when claiming a name.
#30daymapchallenge Day 28: Black. All The *******. A had the idea of redacting a map somehow. This is what I came up with.
A map of Sussex and surrounding counties showing historic borders. The map is juxtaposed with a clip from Yeakell and Gardner's 1797 map of the county that shows two enclaves. Bohunt part of Sussex now in Hampshire and the Tithing of Ambersham which was part of Hampshire but in the middle of what is now West Sussex on the Surrey border. The text on the map states that both enclaves were removed under the Counties (Detached Parts) Act of 1844.
#30daymapchallenge Day 27: Boundaries. I was lucky enough to find a mid 19th century copy of Yeakell and Gardner's historic map of Sussex (1799) a couple of months ago. I noticed a couple of weird borders - now gone. Here they are on a modern map.
A map showing the African coastline between Mauritania and Cameroon. The coast is styled to highlight a strip of land showing all of the ports between Nouabhidouh and Kribi.
#30daymapchallenge Day 26: Transport. A map of West African Ports - in terms of the region this may appear to be an eclectic selection - but it is where my day job happens to be.
A hex map of Great Britain showing the density of trig points across the country. The densities run from 0 to 154 per 10km hex bin. The densest areas are urban.
#30daymapchallenge Day 25: Hexagons. Revisiting my Day 1 dataset - the OS trig point database. Point density again shows a concentration in urban areas.
A map showing a hillshade of the South Downs around the Adur and Ouse rivers. The features of the map are 'Bostals' - a word in Sussex Dialect - that means a steep road or path, usually up the face of the Northern escarpment of the Downs.
#30daymapchallenge Day 24: Places and their names. 'Bostals'. This map shows the steep roads and paths known as Bostals in Sussex Dialect. Sussex Dialect is also notable for having >30 words for mud - some of which remain in use in modern English. "We wunt be druv!"
👍
Centroid issues aside it's a nice map (and I prefer the second version with the park outlines). As someone who lives next door to the South Downs it's a reminder of how many people do not. We need more national parks!
#30daymapchallenge Day 23: Process. I used QGIS to make a map of the main things to think of when I make a basic map in QGIS. Did I miss anything?
It strikes me that the ones that are sprawling are the ones with lots of roundabouts!
#30daymapchallenge Day 22: Natural Earth. The World's Top 10 Reservoirs by Surface Area. All features from Natural Earth. QQIS Multi Maps plugin was useful to compile. The conclusion: Lake Victoria is very large!
#30daymapchallenge Day 21: Icons. I rifled through the OSM legend to pick an icon. Brighton Pubs. The City is famous for having a high density of them. Given current cost of living challenges, many are struggling. Use them while you can.
#30daymapchallenge Day 20: Water. I made this global map to use as a lock screen image for my laptop. I think the black continents really emphasise the bathymetry and I am happy to see it every day. Bathymetry data is Natural Earth Ocean Bottom 50m.
#30daymapchallenge Day 19: Projections. Countries of the Prime Meridian. I live 10k West of the last marker before Meridian leaves the South coast of the UK. This is the view I think of looking from the clifftop over the sea. It is also a map where the North arrow adds value...
#30daymapchallenge Day 18: Out of This World. A simple map of the Moon showing craters >20km. Made using the excellent interactive tool at quickmap.lroc.im-ldi.com.
#30daymapchallenge Day 17: A New Tool. London to Brighton by bike. MS Copilot: 60 minutes of my life I'm not going to get back! 4 times it agreed that Ditchling Beacon was not in Essex and that it would fix it, but still, there it is. And as for that elevation profile... I'll stick to the old tools.
#30daymapchallenge Day 16: Cells. This map shows the Sediment Cells around the coast of England & Wales: finite areas where sediments from sea, coast and rivers intermingle with little movement at the boundaries. I plan to revisit this map for Day 30 for a deeper look at Cell 4.
#30daymapchallenge Day 15: Fire. I'm proud to come from a country where we have strict gun controls. I've tried to show this positively by showing the safest countries to be, when it comes to firearm related homicides.
#30daymapchallenge Day 14: OpenStreetMap. Cycle Lanes of Ougadougou. I was surprised to find, on a visit to the capital of Burkina Faso some years ago, a network of good, well used cycle lanes alongside the major highways. Here they are... 117.5km in total.
#30daymapchallenge Day 13: 10 Minute Map. My cycle commute. Created using my Remarkable e-ink tablet to trace from google maps. It's to scale!
#30daymapchallenge Day 12: 2025. A prediction, based on nothing in particular, on which countries will be nuclear fusion powerhouses by 2125. 'Former' fission powers are indicated also.
#30daymapchallenge Day 11: Minimal. I went back to the Overture Maps Foundation building footprints for this one. The Towers of The Tower of London.
Tell me about it! There are ways to get through that skip the A259 - even if they add a bit a distance.