About The Map Room
The Map Room is a blog about maps by Jonathan Crowe. It was published between March 2003 and June 2011, and covered everything from antique map collecting to the latest in geospatial technology. The Map Room came to an end on June 30, 2011, but you can still browse more than 4,000 entries in the archives. I also still post occasionally to The Map Room’s Twitter and Facebook pages.
Archives
Recent Activity
I haven’t given up on maps: I make an occasional blog post about them on my personal blog: see the Maps category; the most recent entries are below. I’m also working on several map-related projects, including research into the use of maps in fantasy and science fiction.
- Here Be Sea Monsters
- • Just found out about Chet Van Duzer’s Sea Monsters on Medieval and Renaissance Maps, a new book out this month from British Library Publishing, which explores the monsters drawn on maps from the 10th to the 16th century. From… Read more →
- A Topographic Map of Titan
- • The Cassini team has released a global topographic map of Saturn’s moon Titan. What makes this map interesting is the fact that, due to its thick atmosphere, Titan can only be mapped by radar during Cassini’s close flybys. As… Read more →
- Google Maps Redesigned
- • Google announced a complete redesign of Google Maps at their I/O developer conference yesterday. The new maps are vector-based, take up the entire browser window and change based on the context — highlighting certain streets, for example, based on a… Read more →
- OpenStreetMap’s New Map Editor
- • OpenStreetMap has launched a new map editing interface that runs, for the first time, in HTML5. (Potlatch, the previous web-based map editor, uses Flash, and JOSM runs in Java, which I always thought was ironic for an open project.) The… Read more →
- Fictional Worlds Map-Making Competition
- • A map-making competition asking participants to submit maps of their fictional worlds? That’s precisely the sort of thing I should bring to your attention, now that it’s been brought to mine. First announced in February; deadline May 21…. Read more →
- The KickMap Comes to London
- • In 2007 Eddie Jabbour released the KickMap, a map of the New York subway system that tried to square the circle of various competing and controversial New York subway map designs. The KickMap later became an iOS app; I… Read more →
Books Reviewed on The Map Room
- OpenStreetMap (Ramm, Topf and Chilton)
(Reviewed on ) - Infinite City
(Reviewed on ) - Maps in Comics: In Maps & Legends
(Reviewed on ) - National Geographic Atlas of the World, Ninth Edition
(Reviewed on ) - From Here to There
(Reviewed on ) - The Power of Place
(Reviewed on ) - The Fourth Part of the World
(Reviewed on ) - Paris Underground
(Reviewed on ) - Map Addict
(Reviewed on ) - Two Inexpensive Star Atlases
(Reviewed on ) - Cartography Design Annual #1
(Reviewed on ) - Rhumb Lines and Map Wars
(Reviewed on ) - Lost States
(Reviewed on ) - Transit Maps of the World
(Reviewed on ) - Canada Back Road Atlas
(Reviewed on ) - Longitude
(Reviewed on ) - Our Dumb World
(Reviewed on ) - The Geist Atlas of Canada
(Reviewed on ) - From Squaw Tit to Whorehouse Meadow
(Reviewed on ) - Seeing Through Maps
(Reviewed on ) - How to Lie with Maps
(Reviewed on ) - Walking with Your Ancestors by Melinda Kashuba
(Reviewed on ) - Making Maps by Krygier and Wood
(Reviewed on ) - GPS Mapping by Rich Owings
(Reviewed on )









