Hachure map
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Hachures are an older mode of representing relief. They show orientation of slope, and by their thickness and overall density they provide a general sense of steepness. Being non-numeric, they are less useful to a scientific survey than contours, but can successfully communicate quite specific shapes of terrain. They are a form of shading, although different from the one used in shaded maps. Hachure representation of relief was standardized by the Austrian topographer Johann Georg Lehmann in 1799[1]. Hachures may be combined with other ways of representing relief, like shades, the result being a shaded hachure map; an example of such maps are the Dufour maps of Switzerland[2]. Emil von Sydow designed maps with coloured hachures: green for lowlands and brown for highlands.
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[edit] Overview
Hachures are strokes (short line segments or curves) drawn in the direction of the steepest slope (the aspect direction)[3]. Steeper slopes are represented by thicker, shorter and closer strokes, while gentler slopes are represented by thinner, longer and farther apart strokes. A very gentle slope or a flat area, like the top of a hill, are usually left blank. The hachures are traditionally monocolour, usually black, grey or brown; using two complementary colours for the hachures on a neutral background colour (e.g. black and white lines on grey map colour) would give a shading effect as if the relief were illuminated.
[edit] Rules
In representing relief with hachures on a map, six rules are to be followed, according to G.R.P. Lawrence (1979) [4]:
- The hachures are drawn in the direction of the steepest gradient.
- The hachures are arranged in rows perpendicular to their direction.
- The length and thickness of each stroke represents the drop in height along its direction: a short and thick stroke represents a short and steep slope, while a long and thin stroke represents a long and gentle slope.
- The strokes are spaced at an equal distance inside a row.
- The strokes have the same thickness inside a row.
- If the map is illuminated, strokes are thinner and farther apart on the illuminated side.
The Swiss cartographer Eduard Imhof set 5 similar rules[5]:
- Hachures follow the direction of steepest gradient
- Hachures are arranged in horizontal rows
- Hachure length corresponds to the local horizontal distance between assumed contours of a certain interval
- Hachure width is thicker for steeper slopes
- Hachure density remains constant throughout the map area.
If the illumination is vertical, rule 5 is kept; in the case of oblique illumination, it is dropped. The rules above are to be obeyed for large-scale maps. If the map being drawn is a small-scale map (less than 1:500 000 according to Imhof), rules may be relaxed in order to obtain a more suggestive representation.
[edit] References
- ^ Hillshading Alternatives with ArcGIS
- ^ Dufour Map from the The Federal Office of Topography of Switzerland
- ^ Hillshading Alternatives with ArcGIS
- ^ "The Guild Handbook of Scientific Illustration", 2nd edition, edited by Elaine R. S. Hodges, John Wiley and Sons, 2003 (rules are from G.R.P. Lawrence, "Cartographic Methods", 2nd edition, Methuen, 1979)
- ^ http://www.mbmg.mtech.edu/pdf/gis_hachuretxt.pdf Patrick J. Kennelly, A. Jon Kimerling, Desktop Hachure Maps from Digital Elevation Models (cites E. Imhof, Cartographic Relief Presentation, Berlin and New York: Walter de Gruyter, 1982)