In social geography a social map is the cartographic, twodimensional representation of social institutions or processus projected on a plane.
It is the first known European cartographic representation of the Americas.
His cartographic representations of spatial patterns, particularly in 'Theoretical Geography', were also innovative, although somewhat eclipsed by later innovations in geographic information systems (Goodchild 2008).
As a result, Census Superintendent Joseph C. G. Kennedy and his staff produced only an abbreviated set of public reports, without graphic or cartographic representations.
The French Antarctic Expedition under Charcot, 1903-05, charted the point, substantially modifying its earlier cartographic representation.
It was a first-rate cartographic representation of the riverbed containing data relating to islets, tributaries and settlements.
While the geovisualizers focused on the ability of geovisualization to aid in knowledge construction, the foresters preferred the information-communication role of more traditional forms of cartographic representation.
As a result, Superintendent Kennedy and his staff produced only an abbreviated set of reports, which included no graphic or cartographic representations.
He created the first known cartographic representations showing both the Americas as well as Africa and Eurasia.
It is the oldest known European cartographic representation of the New World.