Tag strange maps

Peat, Smoke, Oak, and…er…Haggis?

Strange Maps blogger Frank Jacobs starts 2012 off with a bit of the hair of the dog, sharing this “map” of Scotch whisky flavor profiles:

(Shhh…don’t tell Frank, but it’s a GRAPH, not a map. You can download the full-sized version at Malts.com)

I tried to develop a taste for Scotch, I really did, but it just isn’t my drink. Bridget even bought me a bottle of Balvenie for Christmas a couple of years ago, but it’s still just sitting there, unloved, right next to the mostly-empty bottle of Jameson.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Plugged In

If you have ever traveled abroad, you’ve probably had to deal with figuring out how to get your American electrical devices to work with the different voltages and plug formats one finds. In fact, you may have even spent a few bucks on plug converters and voltage converters.

The plug situation boils down to five basic plug types, and Strange Maps (which is now under the umbrella of the BigThink.com group blog) explains what’s what and where you’ll find which plugs. But, be warned, says Strange Maps author Frank Jacobs, there are in fact 13 different plugs you might encounter in this crazy old world, so be prepared.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Ense petit placidam sub libertate quietem

Usually I find stuff like this at Strange Maps or The Roadside Scholar, but this actually came from Neatorama. It’s a print of a map of the United States by artist Emily Wick, which includes the official (and/or unofficial) mottoes of all 50 states. You can buy the map of the whole country, or, if you prefer, you can buy t-shirts with each individual state as it appears on the larger map.

Massachusetts, of course, is one of the smallest states in terms of land area, but our unofficial motto is one of the longest ones: “By the sword shall we seek peace, but peace only under liberty.” That’s quite a mouthful compared to “Live Free Or Die” (New Hampshire) or “Eureka!” (California).

It might have been a lot easier for Ms. Wick if she had used the REAL official motto of Massachusetts:

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Excellent!

Yesterday, my good friend Solonor tagged me with one of those chain-mail memes.

Usually, I don’t participate, but the meme was to identify 10 excellent blogs, and he was very kind to include me in his list of those that earn the distinction in his opinion, so I figure it’s only fair to play along.

My RSS feed reader tells me I have somewhere in the neighborhood of 150-165 blogs that I follow these days. Luckily for me, not all of those blogs post every day, or even every week, otherwise I would be so far behind I’d never catch up. Over the last couple of years, though, the content of my list has shifted along with the trend in blogs. Where it used to be that my entire blogroll was personal blogs, now the overwhelming majority of blogs I follow are topical, and the few personal blogs that remain are generally low-frequency posters.

So I found it quite difficult, honestly, to come up with a list of 10 really good personal blogs. What I ended up with is two lists of five blogs — one list of blogs that I really enjoy reading, and one list of blogs that I really enjoy looking at. I also ended up with a big empty space in my heart where all those friends from the early days used to be; blogging was a lot more fun when everybody knew everybody else.

My five favorite blogs to read:

  1. Metamorphosism — This is, in fact, the only really personal blog on the list. I admire Mig for his wit and his insight, his sense of the poetic, and his genuinely warped sensibility.
  2. 3QuarksDaily — Best group blog I know of; lots of great links to top-quality articles and other blogs, but also a fair amount of original writing by some of the contributors, including poetry. Because a number of the contributors are non-Americans, the point-of-view of the blog is refreshingly free of the American perspective of the world. This may be the best blog I read, period.
  3. Dangerous Intersection — Also a multi-author blog, although the primary voice belongs to a fellow named Erich Vieth. His posts are intelligent and well-crafted most of the time, with only the occasional minor rant. I find myself agreeing with his opinions and/or appreciating his explanation of an issue over and over again. I realize the inadequacy of my own original writing every time I link to one of his posts and can only manage to croak out “Me, too.”
  4. bookofjoe — Joe has a sharp eye for cool stuff, and often has good links to articles about a wide variety of subjects; I especially appreciate it when he blockquotes the entire article in his post rather than just posting a link, since newspapers and other periodicals often have stupid linking policies and/or the tendency to expire articles after a few days.
  5. Daylight Atheism — There are a lot of atheist blogs right now, but “Ebon Musings”, the author of this blog, is one of the few who takes the time to write thoughtfully in a way that is purposefully designed not to confront believers but to try to explain to them why atheists think the way they do on certain issues and why religious dogma is so often inadequate.

Five favorite blogs to look at:

  1. Roadside Scholar — Gigi Leonard blogs about art, crafts, design, and other cool things. I never know what to expect from her site, only that it will be fun to look at. She’s great about linking to the websites of the artists she features and she occasionally interviews them as well. I find her blog restorative after having plowed through a pile of tech blogs.
  2. La Tartine Gourmande — most food blogs are visually appealing, but this food blog goes to 11. The author is a food stylist as well as a cook, and the craft shows. Plus, she often has wonderful stories about her recipes and her life in France.
  3. Radiology Picture of the Day — I just find this site fascinating. Traditional radiology requires a great deal of observational ability to make out meaningful details from what generally appear to be grey blobs, and yet when you know what to look for it is a powerful diagnostic tool. Most of what this blog shows are X-rays, but the occasional MRI and/or other more modern medical imaging technology are all the more amazing when they appear here. Decidedly not everyone’s cup of tea, but I can’t stop looking.
  4. Strange Maps — Many of us who spend time on the Site Which Must Not Be Named have become fans of this blog, and the pictures that he posts often appear on our web community’s site. Maps are strange and wonderful things indeed — informative, imaginative, wishful, controversial, and beautiful. This site captures all of those things.
  5. Retro Thing — James Grahame, the site author, always has some tidbit from my childhood, or the tantalizing world that existed just before I was born, or some gadget that came from the inscrutable world of Japanese retro-tech, and yet the blog isn’t steeped in hipster irony or kitsch at all.
EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Nation-Building

Balkanized North America
For a larger version of this image, click here

One of my favorite imagination games to play when I am just being inside my own head is to imagine alternate history scenarios. You know, “What if the South won the Civil War?” or “What if the Crusades never happened?”, that sort of thing. I can spend quite a bit of time as I work through all the different possibilities and try to imagine what the world today would be like if things had turned out differently. There is an entire genre of fiction devoted to similar “alternate timeline” stories, too. Some of the books are more serious than others, some are just straight-up genre fiction written with the required alt-history backdrop to make the story more engaging.

Part of this pastime includes reimagining maps to fit the various changes history would have undergone. I can remember taking a map of the world from a copy of National Geographic when I was 12 or 13 and redrawing all the borders to represent a political map of Earth in some future time. As it turns out, I wasn’t too far off in some cases, creating a “United States of Europe” in Western Europe that fits today’s EU pretty well, and granting independence to many of the border republics of the U.S.S.R.

And then there’s a book that I read in college that’s completely non-fiction but also reimagines North America re-divided into nine different countries based on geography, culture and economic bases, “The Nine Nations of North America” by Joel Garreau. The book’s a little dated, and it would be great if he wrote a new edition, but the conceit is a good one and I often consider his ideas when I play these games in my head.

So I picked up on the map you see here right away when it was posted at Strange Maps recently. It might be a little hard to read in this small image, but if you click on the full-sized map, you’ll get it immediately. It’s North America redone to represent some likely changes to the political map if certain events in American, Canadian, and Mexican history had turned out differently. The original website for the map is here and includes a chronology of events that explain how the author imagined the changes to history and their consequences: for example, an early secession of the New England colonies (minus Vermont) from the United States, which in turn allowed the Confederate states to succeed in the Civil War. A Louisiana Purchase that did not include Louisiana, but eventually saw the French colonial Louisiana to declare independence after the re-establishment of the monarchy in France. Very noticeable are the several Native American nations which manage to keep the white settlers out.

I really enjoyed reading through the website (which appears to be dated to 1997!) and the author’s considerations of the vagaries of history, and comparing them to Garreau’s vision, which really does not take many historical events into consideration. It would be interesting as an exercise to see if one could bring them both together into yet another map.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Lies, Damned Lies, And Statistics

Alcohol Consumption Per Capita

This map (via) purports to show the per-capita alcohol consumption of the United States state-by-state. In fact, in its full form, it also shows the per-capita consumption of most of Europe, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand. The nice people at that website also very helpfully provide a chart that breaks it down into numbers for you (just below the maps). The conclusion: Luxembourg has the highest per-capita alcohol consumption rate in the world, followed by, of all places, the state of New Hampshire.

Oh, those boozehounds! Those lushy Luxemburgers, those grog-swilling Granite Staters! And they must be having an identity crisis in Ireland because they finished sixth, behind France and Nevada!

But wait…let’s look a little closer at this, shall we?

The U.S. map is based on data from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, and specifically a report they issued in 2004 on alcohol (ethanol) consumption from 1970-2004. There’s a lot of data on that page, but if you scroll all the way to the very bottom you’ll discover this citation: U.S. Apparent Consumption of Alcoholic Beverages Based on State Sales, Taxation, or Receipt Data. Washington, DC: NIAAA. NIH Publication No. 04-5563 (June 2004).

In other words, they made a direct correlation between the amount of alcohol SOLD and the amount of alcohol CONSUMED.

But what does virtually every person who lives in New England know about New Hampshire that the researchers didn’t seem to take into account? The giant state liquor stores strategically located on every major highway coming into the state, mere feet from the borders of their surrounding neighbors. For decades, New Englanders (and also more than a few vacationing New Yorkers and even Quebecois) have dutifully driven to the nearest New Hampshire border to buy cheap, tax-free booze. Every weekend you can see dozens of cars from Massachusetts, Maine, Vermont, etc. parked in the lots, loading up their trunks with case after case of beer, wine, and spirits.

So, while living in New Hampshire might very well drive a man to drink, I’m willing to say that this particular statistic is a bit skewed by this intervening variable. Whether the same thing is true for Nevada, I can’t say, but given the worldwide popularity of Las Vegas, it’s a pretty good bet that the numbers for that state are off as well.

So what’s up with Luxembourg?

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

All Original Content Copyright © BrianKaneOnline
All Other Content Copyright © Its Original Authors

Built on Notes Blog Core
Powered by WordPress

Switch to our mobile site