Description
Also known as equirectangular, equidistant cylindrical, simple cylindrical, or rectangular, this projection is very simple to construct because it forms a grid of equal rectangles. Because of its simple calculations, its usage was more common in the past. In this projection, the polar regions are less distorted in scale and area than they are in the Mercator projection.
Projection method
This simple cylindrical projection converts the globe into a Cartesian grid. Each rectangular grid cell has the same size, shape, and area. All the graticular intersections are 90°. The traditional Plate Carrée projection uses the equator as the standard parallel. The grid cells are perfect squares. In this projection, the poles are represented as straight lines across the top and bottom of the grid.
Line of contact
Tangent at the equator.
Linear graticules
All meridians and all parallels.
Properties
Shape
Distortion increases as the distance from the standard parallels increases.
Area
Distortion increases as the distance from the standard parallels increases.
Direction
North, south, east, and west directions are accurate. General directions are distorted, except locally along the standard parallels.
Distance
The scale is correct along the meridians and the standard parallels.
Limitations
Noticeable distortion of all properties away from standard parallels.
Uses and applications
Best used for city maps or other small areas with map scales large enough to reduce the obvious distortion.
Used for simple portrayals of the world or regions with minimal geographic data. This makes the projection useful for index maps.
Parameters
Desktop
- False Easting
- False Northing
- Central Meridian
Workstation
- Supported on spheres only.
- Use equirectangular and set the latitude of standard parallel parameter to 0.0.Learn more about the equirectangular projection