3 March 2017
How far is Hawaii from the nearest landmass? 3 March 2017
Originally I had said that the closest point on the North American mainland to Hawaii was near Flumeville, California. However, I was wrong! As it turns out, the southernmost tip of the Alaska Peninsula is actually about 12 miles (20 km) closer.
Located near the town of False Pass, the tip of an unnamed peninsula overlooking Ikatan Bay is exactly 2,259.
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14 December 2016
Mexico’s urban pileups 14 December 2016 -- Buy high-res file -- The US-Mexico border is the most frequently crossed, and one of the longest, in the world. The difference in development between the Mexican and US side is perhaps the greatest of any international border. This results in a really interesting urban pileup effect where many Mexicans move to cities that are right along the US border.
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23 August 2016
The Unscientific Bay Area 23 August 2016 -- Buy high-res file -- Originally this was supposed to be the start of a line of posters, but it failed to gain traction, despite overwhelmingly positive reactions. Nonetheless, below’s the original post for posterity.
I was really inspired by all the positive reactions and support that I got for the original Bay Area map. So I decided to completely redesign and vectorize everything, making it crisp enough to give people the prints they were asking for.
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20 February 2014
America’s GDP Split 20 February 2014
America’s gross domestic product split geographically, 50-50.
The map shows a 50-50 split of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the United States. The GDP of the cyan area is equal to the GDP of the orange area. This would equate to $8.10 trillion for each colored half in the above map.
The orange areas are the 23 largest metro areas (technically MSA’s) by GDP.
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20 February 2014
How big is the Arctic Circle? 10 October 2016
The Map Porn subreddit has a requests page now, which is pretty awesome. User Mjager asked what the Arctic Circle would look like projected near the equator, to get a sense of scale. I decided to just go ahead and do it.
The radius of the Arctic Circle varies minutely with each year. Also, “projecting” is onto the Equator is tricky because the Earth isn’t a perfect sphere, yet the Circle is defined in terms of latitude.
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