The maps in National Geographic’s 10th edition of its Atlas of the World,
released in 2014, were similar to those in 50 years’ worth of previous
editions, from the familiar outlines of continents to Nat Geo’s patented font.
But there was an important difference—the shape of the Arctic.
Using data from NASA and the National
Snow and Ice Data Center, Nat Geo remapped the area in 2013 to show how
the Arctic’s ice sheet had receded. The change was so extensive that President Barack Obama mentioned it in a speech on global warming. But as soon as the cartographers had finished drawing, their map was already out of date.
“The sea ice changes monthly and daily so
it’s very hard to capture it in one static image,” explains Rosemary
Wardley, a senior GIS cartographer at National Geographic Maps, and part
of the world atlas team.
To capture this state of change, Nat Geo has attempted to portray the Arctic “a little differently” in its recent visual atlas,
presenting data about the state of the sea ice over time and during
different seasons. The ice has a more “physical look” and a less “solid,
white feel.” “We wanted to make sure the user could see the multiyear
ice [ice that survives more than one melting season] and that while it’s
something solid, it is changing,” says Wardley.
It is often political changes—new
countries, names and borders—that prompt the redrawing of maps of the
world. Governments and international bodies confirm these details to
mappers. But when physical features change, “there’s more wiggle room,”
says Wardley. “There’s no authority on how the world is changing.”
The scale of climate change makes representing it difficult, too. “It’s not on a human scale, it’s on more of a geologic scale that’s difficult for the layperson to take in,” says Wardley.
For mapmakers, capturing something that can change the world’s physical features so rapidly is a challenge.
“The vision of maps as static and hung on
the wall collecting dust is ingrained in our culture because that’s how
we’ve treated maps for hundreds of years,” says Alastair Bonnett,
professor of social geography at Newcastle University in England, and
author of Beyond the Map.
“It’s difficult for us to move to the new
world where not only is the planet changing fast but maps are
struggling to keep up. But change we must.”
In an effort to tackle this and buoyed by advances in digital mapping tools, groups such as MapAction and Humanitarian OpenStreetMap (HOT) are changing what maps can look like, how they can be used, and who can make them.
HOT “activates” on-the-ground and remote
mappers to help countries and humanitarian organizations prepare for and
respond to natural disasters. A mapper online may be presented with a
single square of satellite imagery and be asked to draw over any roads
or buildings. This information is used to create and update a digital
map, which can then be used by aid agencies or emergency responders, for
example.
“Mapping, which was historically thought
of as this technical, highly-skilled thing, becomes something that’s
just drawing and saying we need just these two things to enable
humanitarian work,” says Rebecca Firth, HOT’s community partnerships
manager.
The organization’s efforts have recently focused on mapping five concurrent disasters,
from hurricanes in the Caribbean to flooding in South Asia, attracting
more than 4,800 volunteers. These rapidly updating maps show the effects
of extreme weather and climate change on people and populations. Firth
says there has been a rise in requests for “vulnerability and exposure
mapping” in the past 12 months, too, as more of the world’s population
experiences climate-change risk.
Collaboration and digital tools may help
mapping overcome the struggle to keep up with a changing climate. Drone
imagery recently allowed HOT to provide same-day updates to maps after
landslides in Colombia, removing the wait for a government program to
remap the area or for Google to update its images.
Yet, in the push to be up-to-the-minute
to cover the effects of climate change, older maps should not be
discarded. Wardley’s team used the updated 10th edition of the Nat Geo
atlas as an opportunity to compare how the world map had been drawn over
the last 50 years. A gif
on National Geographic’s website shows a swathe of pale blue water
eventually eclipsing the north and north-west portion of the Arctic ice,
the blue font of the words “Arctic Ocean” fading into the background.
At Covehithe in Suffolk, England, the
coastline is disappearing by meters each year. Bonnett says he realized
he was looking out from the low clifftop onto where Doggerland, an
ancient piece of land which joined the UK to northern Europe, would have
been. The country of Doggerland was once home to Stone Age settlers,
but was lost beneath a rising North Sea after global warming following
the last ice age some 12,000 years ago.
“We are joining or becoming connected
with previous generations who have witnessed great climate change and
the disappearance of their land,” he says. “There’s a sense that climate
change can make us think about our relationship to people from distant
generations who also had to experience sudden and dramatic climate
change, though not humanly caused.”
By 2050, an estimated 66 percent of the world’s population will live in cities,
driven in part by climate change, such as extreme flooding or drought
in rural areas. Expanding cities are at increased risk from the effects
of climate change, as mapped by the European Environment Agency. They also require new maps to help us understand them.
“We live in layers stacked
up. A 3D map is hard to navigate partly because we are so used to maps
being flat,” says Bonnett. “It’s not just a question of physical changes
and data changes, but of us trying to get our heads around new
dimensions in mapping.”
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