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The Atlas of Terrestrial Group Planets and their Moons (Russian: Атлас планет Земной группы и их спутников) is a Soviet-era planetary atlas published in the Russian language in Moscow. It summarizes Soviet and American planetary science results in thematic maps of Mercury, Venus, the Moon, Mars, Phobos, and also includes Earth maps for all themes for comparison. This makes it the first comparative planetological atlas, made using traditional cartographic techniques.
Significance and features
Some of the newly imaged terrain revealed for the first time by Russian spacecraft and then shown in Russian-published map sheets[1] were depicted in an Atlas format for the first time, and it is the first publication that uniformly utilized the Cyrillic planetary nomenclature developed by Russian scientists, of which several names were originally Russian and later transcribed for the officially Latin IAU nomenclature.[2] Its significance is that it was, and still is, the only cartographic atlas of planetary bodies with a complex geoscience approach that enables comparative planetological studies.[3] Thematic and generic physical maps using traditional (manual) cartographic techniques of the planets were produced using similar methodology.
English language digital version
Its English language, updated digital, version[4][5] has been published by the Planetary Cartography Laboratory at the Moscow State University for Geodesy and Cartography (MIIGAiK) in 2007,[6][7] Moscow that also created a Russian version.[8][9] Pages were scanned for the project[10] although the digital
does not include any images. Some geologic maps were updated for the electronic version.[11]
Sections
Sections (and thematic maps) include the following themes:
- Shaded relief maps (using pencil drawings)
- Blank maps (outlines of main features, different tones for the main topographic or albedo domains, plus nomenclature)
- Hypsometric maps (relief shown by colors)
- Albedo maps (overlain by the blank map outlines)
- Geophysical maps
- Geologo-morphologic maps
- Discovery and flights maps
- Photographic coverage maps
- Cartographic coverage maps
Editing and publication
It was edited by VD Bolshakov, Kira Shingareva, Jeanna F Rodionova and their colleagues in 12 years' of work[12] at the MIIGAiK.[13]
The atlas contains 208 pages. It was printed in 1992, in 500 copies. The publisher was MIIGAiK University, Moscow.
Maps
Several of the hand-drawn basemaps in this Atlas were later used in the series of Multilingual Maps for Terrestrial Planets and their Moons, published in Dresden[14][15][16] and Budapest.[17] The map design utilized in the Atlas also affected subsequent planetary globes produced at MIIGAiK where it was developed, such as the Globe of Mercury[18] and the maps of Io and Enceladus.[19]
References
- ^ Kirk RL, Archinal BA, Gaddis LR, ROsiek MR (2006) CARTOGRAPHY FOR LUNAR EXPLORATION: 2006 STATUS AND PLANNED MISSIONS. International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing Conference Commission IV, WG IV/7, September 25–30, 2006, Goa, India.
- ^ Millman, P. M. (1979). "1979IAUTA..17a.113M Page A113". Transactions of the International Astronomical Union. 17: 113. Bibcode:1979IAUTA..17a.113M. Retrieved 29 January 2023.
- ^ Rozhnev, I.Y. "DIGITIZATION OF "THE ATLAS OF TERRESTRIAL GROUP PLANETS AND THEIR MOONS". ITS UPDATING OPTIONS" (PDF). 3rd INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CARTOGRAPHY AND GIS.
- ^ "PlanetMaps.ru | Atlas of Terrestrial Group Planets and their Moons". planetmaps.ru. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
- ^ "Call for Papers | Cartographic Heritage Workshop 2010". cartography.tuwien.ac.at. Retrieved 5 June 2023.
- ^ "International Astronomical Union | IAU". www.iau.org. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
- ^ Cherepanova E., K. Shingareva, I. Karachevtseva, S. Leonenko, E. Lazarev (2007) EXTRATERRESTRIAL GIS DEVELOPMENT ON SOLAR SYSTEM BODIES: THE EARTH MOON GEODATABASE. XXIII International Cartographic Conference 4–10 August Moscow 2007, Russia. URL https://icaci.org/files/documents/ICC_proceedings/ICC2007/documents/doc/THEME%2024/Oral%204/EXTRATERRESTRIAL%20GIS%20DEVELOPMENT%20ON%20SOLAR%20SYSTEM%20BODIES%20THE%20.doc
- ^ "PlanetMaps.ru | Атлас планет Земной группы и их спутников". planetmaps.ru. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
- ^ Leonenko SM, Dubov SS, Rozhnev IY (2007) BILINGUAL MULTIMEDIA ELECTRONIC VERSION OF "ATLAS OF TERRESTRIAL PLANETS AND THEIR MOONS" ICC 2007 Conference, Moscow
- ^ ROZHNEV, I. "DEVELOPMENT OF THE PLANETARY CARTOGRAPHY WEB-SITE WITH OPEN SOURCE CONTENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM" (PDF). International Cartographic Conference (ICC) Proceedings 2011: CO-131.
- ^ Burba GA (2004) GEOLOGIC HISTORY OF VENUS IN SIMPLIFIED PRESENTATION: EDUCATIONAL MAP FOR THE ELECTRONIC ATLAS OF TERRESTRIAL PLANETS AND SATELLITES. Vernadsky-Brown Microsymposium 40, abstract 14. http://www.planetology.ru/books/vernadsky-brown/vernadsky-brown_40_2004.pdf
- ^ van den Hoonaard, Will C. (2 January 2016). "Moonstruck: Cartographic Explorations of the Moon by Mary Adela Blagg and Kira B. Shingareva". Terrae Incognitae. 48 (1): 76–86. doi:10.1080/00822884.2016.1147254. ISSN 0082-2884. S2CID 218689624.
- ^ "International Astronomical Union | IAU". www.iau.org. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
- ^ Nass A, Di K, Elgner S, van Gasselt S, Hare T et al. (2017) Planetary Cartography – Activities and Current Challenges. Proceedings of the International Cartographic Association, 1, 2017. https://doi.org/10.5194/ica-proc-1-81-2017
- ^ Shingareva KB, Karsnopevtseva BV, Buchroithner MF (2001) Venus Map (The Series of Multilingual Maps for Terrestrial Planets and their Moons). Proceedings of the 20th ICA/ACI International Cartographic Conference, 6–10 August 2001, Beijing, China. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/292133757_Venus_Map_The_Series_of_Multilingual_Maps_for_Terrestrial_Planets_and_their_Moons
- ^ Shingareva, K.B., Krasnopevtseva, B.V., Leonenko, S.M., Buchroithner, M.F. and Waelder, O (2003) Mercury - A New Map Within The Series of Multilingual Relief Maps Of The Terrestrial Planets and Their Moons. ICC 2003 21st International Cartographic Conference Durban, South Africa, 10–16 August 2003. https://icaci.org/files/documents/ICC_proceedings/ICC2003/Papers/198.pdf
- ^ Hargitai, H.; Berczi, Sz. (1 January 2006). "Multilingual Maps of the Terrestrial Planets and their Moons: the East and Central European Edition". European Planetary Science Congress 2006: 515. Bibcode:2006epsc.conf..515H.
- ^ Zharkova Yu A., Rodionova Zh F, Kokhanov AA, Karachevtseva IP (2016) New Mecury Mapping using MESSENGER data: current status and future. 47th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, Houston, TX. https://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2016/pdf/1063.pdf
- ^ Karachevtseva I, Shishkina L, Karpunkina ME (2012) New Cartography of Io and Enceladus. Annual Meeting of Planetary Geologic Mappers, Flagstaff, AZ. https://astropedia.astrogeology.usgs.gov/alfresco/d/d/workspace/SpacesStore/fa31ffb9-dc1b-468c-8314-cf92ee3dad01/2012_PGM_abstract_volume_prelim.pdf
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