GEOG
321, C. Brewer
Compilation and Copyright
(based on Jeannine Schonta’s lectures)
research…compilation…editing
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purpose
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selection of base map, reuse?
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differences in scale
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how current is source?
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have boundaries changed?
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distorted through reproduction?
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use 3 or 4 sources, all have errors
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find errors at larger scales
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be resourceful
need access to quality information
trained in cartography...not authority
on subject mapped
consistency in level of generalization
U.S. Board on Geographic Names
http://mapping.usgs.gov/www/gnis/
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standardize geographic names for gov. use
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consistency in local vs. conventional name
(e.g. München vs. Munich, Grønland vs. Kalaalit Nunaat vs Greenland)
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local official name vs. shortened name (e.g.
Kingdom of Spain vs. Spain)
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different names result form different systems of translation
(e.g.
Yekaterinburg, Jekaterinburg, Ekaterinburg)
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features may occur in multiple countries
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e.g. Danube River (English, conventional),
Donau (Germany, Austria), Duna (Hungary), Dunaj (Czech), Dunav (Bulgarian),
Dunay (Ukraine)
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consistency in use of generics or shortforms (e.g.
River, Desert)
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awareness of generics embedded in names (Rio,
Storia)
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geopolitics: new countries, name changes, independent or
dependency or disputed
Be worried about copyright
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copyright protects form of original works
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selection, design, synthesis
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client owns copyright
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US federal government maps not copyrighted
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not same of other countries (e.g. Ordinance
Survey, UK)
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local governments?
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private companies defend their copyright
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licensing