Earth Science Week! Oct. 12th-18th: “No Child Left Inside”

Sponsored by the American Geosciences Institute, The week of October 12th week is Earth Science Week. The theme is “Mapping Our World.”

I love maps. Maps come in all shapes, sizes, and configurations. They tell us about more than the size and shape of continents, oceans, rivers, lakes, and ponds. They illustrate our travels, pinpoint natural resources and the places we live, shop, learn, and play.

In my 30s, I returned to college where my favorite earth sciences class was geology– especially the impacts of plate tectonics. This United States Geological Survey poster hung on my wall for years. The heavy black lines extending from off Australia up and across the Pacific at Alaska and down to South America are studded with red dots. They are volcanic hotspots mapping the ridge of fire, earthquakes, sometimes tsunamis, all products of the earth’s restless undergarments.

USGS techtonic map

My uncle and I spent years plying the waters of our family’s history. When my first ancestors ventured from Europe to America in 1633, the world map looked like this. Check out the size of Antarctica! Brrrr!

World Map 1633

World Map 1633

Maps had improved significantly by the time my 4th great grandfather and his son sailed the world’s oceans as master mariners the early1800s to the Civil War.

World map 1863 Pub. Gotha

World map, 1863, showing routes of steam navigation companies, lines of steam packet communications, telegraph lines, tracks of sailing vessels, ocean depths and currents.

You can’t get from here to there or run a war without maps or mapmakers.

Civil War-Cartographic engineers Camp Winfield Scott

Civil War-Cartographic engineers Camp Winfield Scott

One of the most unusual maps is Buckminster (Bucky) Fuller’s, Fuller Projection or Dymaxian Map. He wanted to show the planet as one, connected “island,” moving away from the perception we’re separated by a belief the planet has to operate on its “you or me.” Bucky preferred, rightly so, to use AND as the separator.Treehugger article dymaxion_map.jpg.662x0_q100_crop-scaleSee how a few cartographers have re-imagined his map for the 21st century.

My most recent mapping interest involved sea turtles and research for Elizabeth’s Landing. Elizabeth learns how small transmitters, glued to turtles’ backs, beam signals to satellites, which beam the coordinates back to scientists. Scientists use information on where sea turtles feed and breed in conservation efforts all over the world’s oceans. As Elizabeth says, “…a turtle talking to outer space. How cool is that?”

Olive ridley sea turtle movements off Bangladesh. Tracked via satellite transmitter. By Marinelife Alliance and seaturtle.org

Olive ridley sea turtle movements off Bangladesh. Tracked via satellite transmitter. By Marinelife Alliance and seaturtle.org

Update 10-8-14: Story maps are a writer’s tool for designing and revising plot, character behavior, or scenes that move the story forward. When I get stuck on any of these, I stop and work out what’s happening to my character and why, graphically, with my character or plot situation in the center and all the things that are happening radiating out from there. Gettiing all this out of my head into a visual clears my thinking like a warm summer breeze clears haze over the hills. Here’s a simple Plot Map that’s great for kids, or anyone interested in desiging or analyzing a story

thanks to Schoolbox and Angela E. Hunt

thanks to Schoolbox and Angela E. Hunt 

What would you like to map this week? The floor plan of your house, your block or neighborhood? All the plants in your garden where pollinators like bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds hang out? Choose a spot, then map out and plant a new garden for them.

Butterfly garden plan-About.com Gardening

Butterfly garden plan-About.com Gardening

How about how your family got from where it started to where you are now? A family vacation in 2D? Show where you went (or dream of going) and photos of what you saw–mountains, rivers, forests, city buildings, a baseball stadium? Use flat maps, research Internet maps and photo sites. Just like books, a map can take you anywhere.

Visit AGI for more map project ideas (or teacher lesson plans using maps).

What part have maps played in your life? Love them, confused every time you look at one? Share your thoughts in the Comments section and links to your projects.

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