Coast Lines: How Mapmakers Frame the World and Chart Environmental Change

Coast Lines: How Mapmakers Frame the World and Chart Environmental Change

by Mark Monmonier
Coast Lines: How Mapmakers Frame the World and Chart Environmental Change

Coast Lines: How Mapmakers Frame the World and Chart Environmental Change

by Mark Monmonier

Hardcover(New Edition)

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Overview

In the next century, sea levels are predicted to rise at unprecedented rates, causing flooding around the world, from the islands of Malaysia and the canals of Venice to the coasts of Florida and California. These rising water levels pose serious challenges to all aspects of coastal existence—chiefly economic, residential, and environmental—as well as to the cartographic definition and mapping of coasts. It is this facet of coastal life that Mark Monmonier tackles in Coast Lines. Setting sail on a journey across shifting landscapes, cartographic technology, and climate change, Monmonier reveals that coastlines are as much a set of ideas, assumptions, and societal beliefs as they are solid black lines on maps.
Whether for sailing charts or property maps, Monmonier shows, coastlines challenge mapmakers to capture on paper a highly irregular land-water boundary perturbed by tides and storms and complicated by rocks, wrecks, and shoals. Coast Lines is peppered with captivating anecdotes about the frustrating effort to expunge fictitious islands from nautical charts, the tricky measurement of a coastline’s length, and the contentious notions of beachfront property and public access.

Combing maritime history and the history of technology, Coast Lines charts the historical progression from offshore sketches to satellite images and explores the societal impact of coastal cartography on everything from global warming to homeland security. Returning to the form of his celebrated Air Apparent, Monmonier ably renders the topic of coastal cartography accessible to both general readers and historians of science, technology, and maritime studies. In the post-Katrina era, when the map of entire regions can be redrawn by a single natural event, the issues he raises are more important than ever.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780226534039
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Publication date: 05/15/2008
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Mark Monmonier is distinguished professor of geography at Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs and the author of many books, including most recently, From Squaw Tit to Whorehouse Meadow, also published by the University of Chicago Press.

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments            
      
            1          Depiction and Measurement
            2          Definitions and Delineations
            3          New Worlds and Fictitious Islands
            4          Triangles and Topography
            5          Overhead Imaging
            6          Electronic Charts and Precise Positioning
            7          Global Shorelines
            8          Baselines and Offshore Borders
            9          Calibrating Catastrophe
            10        Rising Seas, Eroding Surge
            11        Close-ups and Complexity
            12        Epilogue

                        Notes
                        Bibliography
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