Topological map
- Not to be confused with a topographic map.
In cartography and geology, a topological map is a type of diagram that has been simplified so that only vital information remains and unnecessary detail has been removed. These maps lack scale, and distance and direction are subject to change and variation, but the relationship between points is maintained. A good example is the tube map of the London Underground or the map for the New York City Subway.
The name topological map is derived from topology, the branch of mathematics that studies the properties of objects that do not change as the object is deformed, much as the tube map retains useful information despite bearing little resemblance to the actual layout of the underground system.
See also
- Aerial photography
- Animated mapping
- British Cartographic Society
- Cartogram
- Cartographic relief depiction
- Cartographic generalization
- Contour line
- Critical cartography
- Digital Cadastral DataBase
- Fantasy map
- Figure-ground in map design
- Four color theorem
- Gazetteer
- Geocode
- Geographic Information System (GIS)
- Geovisualization
- Here be dragons
- Isostasy
- Japanese map symbols
- List of cartographers
- Locator map
- Map projection
- National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency
- OpenStreetMap, a collaborative project, mapping the world's roads using GPS
- Orthophoto
- Pictorial maps
- Planetary cartography
- Point of Beginning
- Sea level
- Terra incognita
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