American polyconic projection


In the cartography of the United States, the American polyconic projection is a map projection used for maps of the United States and its regions beginning early in the 19th century. It belongs to the polyconic projection class, which consists of map projections whose parallels are non-concentric circular arcs except for the equator, which is straight. Often the American polyconic is simply called the polyconic projection.
The American polyconic projection was probably invented by Swiss-American cartographer Ferdinand Rudolph Hassler around 1825. It was commonly used by many map-making agencies of the United States from the time of its proposal until the middle of the 20th century.[1] It is not used much these days, having been replaced by conformal projections in the State Plane Coordinate System.
Description
The American polyconic projection can be thought of as "rolling" a cone tangent to the Earth at all parallels of latitude. This generalizes the concept of a conic projection, which uses a single cone to project the globe onto. By using this continuously varying cone, each parallel becomes a circular arc having true scale, contrasting with a conic projection, which can only have one or two parallels at true scale. The scale is also true on the central meridian of the projection.
The projection is defined by:
where:
- Template:Mvar is the longitude of the point to be projected;
- Template:Mvar is the latitude of the point to be projected;
- Template:Math is the longitude of the central meridian;
- Template:Math is the latitude chosen to be the origin at Template:Math.
To avoid division by zero, the formulas above are extended so that if Template:Math, then Template:Math and Template:Math.
See also
References
External links
- Template:Mathworld
- Table of examples and properties of all common projections, from radicalcartography.net
- An interactive Java Applet to study the metric deformations of the Polyconic Projection.
- ↑ Flattening the Earth: Two Thousand Years of Map Projections, John P. Snyder, 1993, pp. 117-122, Template:ISBN.