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( cant be weather or political)

2007-02-17 13:01:45 · 4 answers · asked by 12345 3 in News & Events Media & Journalism

4 answers

uummm

2007-02-17 13:03:58 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

You could try the book "How to Lie with Maps", by Mark Monmonier. One kind of misleading map would be a choropleth map with unequal class intervals. Another kind would be a map showing city populations as circles, with radius proportional to population. Anyone reading the map would probably assume the area of the circle represents the population, but in fact the area would match the population squared.

2007-02-17 21:39:20 · answer #2 · answered by Gwillim 4 · 1 0

Make anything on a paper and declare it a map. Simple answer.

2007-02-17 21:04:52 · answer #3 · answered by Hafeez 3 · 0 1

why?

2007-02-17 21:03:34 · answer #4 · answered by montgomery 2 · 0 1

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