Description
Also called Babinet, elliptical, homolographic, or homalographic, Carl B. Mollweide created this pseudo cylindrical projection in 1805. It is an equal-area projection designed for small-scale maps.
Projection method
Pseudo cylindrical equal-area projection. All parallels are straight lines, and all meridians are equally spaced elliptical arcs. The exception is the central meridian, which is a straight line. The poles are points.
Linear graticules
The equator and central meridian.
Properties
Shape
Shape is not distorted at the intersection of the central meridian and latitudes 40°44' N and S. Distortion increases outward from these points and becomes severe at the edges of the projection.
Area
Equal area.
Direction
Local angles are true only at the intersection of the central meridian and latitudes 40°44' N and S. Direction is distorted elsewhere.
Distance
Scale is true along latitudes 40°44' N and S. Distortion increases with distance from these lines and becomes severe at the edges of the projection.
Limitations
Useful only as a world map.
Uses and applications
Suitable for thematic or distribution mapping of the entire world, frequently in interrupted form.
Combined with the Sinusoidal to create Goode's Homolosine and Boggs.
Parameters
Desktop
- False Easting
- False Northing
- Central Meridian
Mollweide Auxiliary Sphere (Desktop version 9.3 and later)
- False Easting
- False Northing
- Central Meridian
- Auxiliary Sphere Type
Workstation
- Longitude of projection center