Physical Globe

Ingeborg Brun’s Globe of Mars (1909)

Ingeborg Brun’s Globe of Mars (1909)

Hand painted by the Danish astronomer Emmy Ingeborg Brun in 1905-1909. The globe is based on the canal maps of Percival Lowell. Note nice Art Nouveau style lettering. “Brun is known to have presented Flammarion with one of her globes. Fewer than ten of Brun’s Mars globes appear to have been recorded.” (Source) Original globe […]

Globe of Io (Celldömölk)

Globe of Io (Celldömölk)

Hand-made globe of Io, displayed at the Kemenes Vulkán Park museum’s Solar System Room. Location: Celldömölk, Hungary Cartographers: Mátyás Gede, Zsófia Merk, Henrik Hargitai Date: 2013. Virtual Io Globe Links: Planetcarto‘s post About the CelldömölkVolcano Museum

Globus Luny (1970)

Globus Luny (1970)

The globe was made using Luna and Zond  images. The globe is exhibited at the Memorial Museum of Astronautics in Moscow. The far side contains ambiguous formations as well as two names that has not neen approved by IAU for these features: Kondratiuk (probably not existing as a landform) and Kibalchich (now named Herzsprung).  Mykola […]

Thermoplastic Globe of Mars

Thermoplastic Globe of Mars

MARS GLOBE with built-in light Made by V.M. Boginsky at TSNIIGAiK Cartographic Laboratory of the Central Scientific Institute for Geodesy and Cartography  

Glubus Marsa (1989)

Glubus Marsa (1989)

Glubus Marsa Scale: 1:19 500 000 Publisher: Sternberg / GUGK  / PKO Cartograpia, Moscow 1989. Cartographers: V.V: Sevtsenko, Zh. F. Rodionova, V.D. Stushnovoy (relief) Other editions: 1993 1:20M (34 cm) and  1:26M (25 cm) (10.000 copies) The first Mars globe of 1989. Based on Mariner, Viking and Mars spacecrafts. The source material for relief shading was […]

Gaudibert’s Globe de la Lune

Gaudibert’s Globe de la Lune

Cartographer: Casimir Marie Gaudibert „dressé sous la direction de Camille Flammarion par C. M. Gaudibert „ Publisher: Paris: Bertaux Note: Far side is used for gazetteer. Designed for telescopic observations (south is up) Based on Gaudibert’s map of 1887. Image: Austrian National Library Reference: http://data.onb.ac.at/rec/AC04847693

First Complete Moon Globe 1967

1:10 000 000 Nauka, Moskva, 1967. Prepared at the same time as the first complete map of the Moon in 1967, both at Sternberg Astronomical Institute, for the International Congress of Astronomical Union in Prague. K.B. Shingareva have presented the map and globe in the Prage Congress. About 10 globes were made. One was brought […]

Raths Erdmondglobus (1976)

Raths Erdmondglobus (1976)

33 cm 1:10 500 000 Ed. Hellmuth Wolf Gotha/Leipzig, 1976 DDR Virtual Globe for Google Earth. Google Earth Add-on: DDR Lunar Globe Download kmz file for Google Earth Downoad VRML file for Flux Player or orther VR players

Chinese Chang’E-1 Globe of the Moon

Chinese Chang’E-1 Globe of the Moon

Plastic Diameter: 20 cm, 32 cm, 106 cm Scale: 1:17,000,000 Dual colored shaded relief globe with albedo markings. Published by Chian (Beijing) Boom Cartographic Products Co Ltd Made by: National Astronomical Observatories, Suveying and Mapping Press Consultants: Ouyang Ziyuan, Yan Jun, Liu Xiaoqun. Chief editor: Li Chunlai Deputy chief editors: Liu Jianjun, Mu Lingli Translators: […]

Hypsometric globe of Mars (2012)

Hypsometric globe of Mars (2012)

Publisher: Sternberg State Astronomical Institute (SAI) in cooperation with the Department of Cartography and Geoinformatics Faculty of Geography Moscow State University Source of data: MOLA; showing landing sites Cartographers: Zh. F. Rodionova, J. Brekhovskikh (Space Research Institute) (color scheme, based the previous Hypsometric map of Mars, scale 1:26 000 000 [Ilukhina, 2004]) Height scheme: The […]

Globe of Mars, Budapest (2009)

Globe of Mars, Budapest (2009)

MOLA Topographic globe with IAU and informal nomenclature and MOC 1999 photomosaic globe with albedo names.Mars cartographer: H. I. HargitaiGlobe cartographer: M. GedeYear of Publication: 2009Publisher: Eötvös Loránd University, Institute of Geography and Earth Sciences, Planetary Science Research GroupNomecnlature: Latin+English (includes informal names)Virtual version: The globe has been made digitally, for VRML display. Only few […]

Reploge Mars Globe (1981)

Reploge Mars Globe (1981)

Publisher: Reploge, Chicago Title: “The Lithospheres of the Terrestrial Planets” Cartographers: Raymond M Batson; Jay L Inge Manufactured for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Planetary Geology Programs [sic], Office of Space Science, by Replogle Globes. The copy at the ÖNB Kartensammlung und Globenmuseum References Austrian National Library http://www.worldcat.org/title/lithospheres-of-the-terrestrial-planets/oclc/213884257

Explanation
Column name Column description
Catalog ID (M) N/A
Title Title of map
Author Name of mapper(s), or author, PI, map editor, illustrator, etc. with roles
Nationality Nationality of author
Start date Year when mapping began / or year or observation
Date of publication Year of publication or completion of manusctipt (empty if not published yet)
Body Target name (planetary body)
Online Online references about the map
Projection Projection of map. 2-hemisphere is shown here.
Scale N/A
Orientation Orientation of map [north up, south up] – only for historic maps (north: cartographic tradition, south: astronomical tradition)
Publication type The type of work that contains the map. [standalone, journal, conference, atlas, book figure, book supplement, book plate, encyclopedia, multisheet, digital]
Type, purpose Type of map purpose [generic, outreach, science, citizen, surface operation (pre mission), landing site (post mission), observer, opposition, index, reference, eclipse/transit/occultation] generic: not defined, outreach: maps for the general public made b
Primary Nomenclature Laguage(s) of nomenclature displayed on the map [Latin, English etc., IAU, informal]. Latin for Latin nomenclature prior to IAU.
Ref (map) Full reference of map publication or publication that contains the map
DOI DOI number of map
ID (publication) ID of map publication or figure number
Origin type If this map is not original, the following codes are used: [L: language variant, N: new print, U: updated edition, C: copied / modified from another map, R: renovation map (digital version of paper map with slight changes), F facsimile. RP: republished in
Origin ID Any maps that this map is based on or copied from. Database ID of original map.
Based on map Name of mapper
Base (spacecraft, telescope) Name of spacecraft / instrument
Original title Title of map in original langage (if not English)
Publisher Name of Publisher; manuscript or self-published. For journals and conferences, the name of the journal or conference.
Coverage Coverage of map [global, hemispheric, regional, local, landing site, landing ellipse, traverse]
Target location IAU name of target feature (if named) or near side, far side etc. (If nothing noted, it is global)
Country Country of Publisher (original/translation)
Type, content Type of map [photo, map, sketch map, drawing, globe, tactile, data]. Data for raster datasets. For vector data, see Feature DB. Drawing: no grid, scale, projection etc.
Image base Base theme of the map [shaded relief, photomosaic, photo, none]
Theme Theme of map [visual, albedo, radar, low sun, topography, elevation, geology, geomorphology, art, nomenclature reference, feature, landing site reference, opposition map, event (eclipse etc) etc.]. Low sun is optical photo with shadows and no albedo. Vis
Technique Cartographic technique [imagemap, datamap, cartographic map, unit map, airbrush, pencil, line drawing/outline, contour lines, DEM, DIM, shaded relief / hillshading, raster data etc.]
Style Details on style
Method Method how the data was obtained
Mapping scale Scale of mapping
Resolution Raster dataset resoltion [m/pixel]
Short Reference Short form of reference to the map publication
GIS / data URL where GIS or original spatial data is
Data provider N/A
Profession Profession of author (for historic maps)
Designator Sheet designator terms following Greeley and Batson (1990) Planetary Mapping. Cambridge University Press. – only if displayed on the map. First letter: target body, 5M: scale, 90/0 etc: center coordinates, OM – orthophotomosaic , T – Topographic data (nom
Control Controlled, semi-controlled, uncontrolled
Note on control Base of control
Series title Title of map series
Number of maps (in work) N/A
Number of quads N/A
Quad ID Quad ID (or quads IDs) contained on the map
Map Diameter N/A
Map width cm N/A
Map height cm N/A
Map width px N/A
Map height px N/A
Base type Type of instrument of observation of base data [naked eye, telescope, spacecraft, space telescope, lander]
Location of copy Library or archive where manuscript or rare copy is kept
Ref (literature) Reference – literature about the map, may be the source of data if the map is not available. Separated with # symbols.
Status (2017) Status of mapping [complete, in progress, in review] (mostly for USGS maps)
Aim Original aim of mapping, if available
Notes Any comments, remarks [Long text, may be multiple paragraphs]
Secondary nomenclature Other languages of the nomenclature
Nomenclature Notes Remarks on nomenclature
Photo note N/A
Reference frame ID from RefFrames
web2 Online references about the map
web3 Online references about the map
web4 Online references about the map
ocentric/ographic Map coordinate [planetographic, planetocentric]
N N/A
S N/A
W 360E N/A
E 360E N/A
W 180 N/A
E 180 N/A
W 360W N/A
R 360W N/A
fig1 N/A
fig1 caption N/A
fig2 N/A
fig2 caption N/A
fig3 N/A
fig3 caption N/A
fig4 N/A
fig4 caption N/A
fig5 N/A
fig5 caption N/A
STATUS N/A
Sum $180