Notes:
- "Cartesian (Orthonormal) Geodetic"
is used here to denote a global mapping of data referenced
by Longitude and Latitude to an Cartesian (x = latitude, y = longitude),
orthonormal (meaning independent, perpendicular axes) linear (equal
intervals) coordinate system. This is also referred to as a "Platte
Carree" or simply "Latitude /Longitude" projection.
Note: Some references point out that this is not a "projection"
in the traditional sense, because it cannot be produced by physical
projection from a sphere onto a euclidean plane, but it is nevertheless
a mathematical mapping of geodetic coordinates onto a euclidean
plane. The term "unprojected" is sometimes used to indicate
that there is no coordinate conversion, however this does not
describe the mapping. Properties: Distances are true (for
a spherical geoid) along all meridians and the equator. Scale,
area, direction, and angular distance vary with latitude. The
value of this projection is its simplicity and use as a basis
for collecting data and for producing other projections. [Please
use Browser's back button to return to previous text.]
- "Albers" refers to the
Albers Equal Area Conic projection. Properties: All areas
on the map are proportional to the same areas on the Earth. Directions
are reasonably accurate in limited regions. Distances are true
on both standard parallels. Maximum scale error is 1 1/4% (Conterminous
United States). Scale is true only along standard parallels. Map
is not conformal, perspective, or equidistant. (ref: USGS Map
Projections) [Please use Browser's back button to return to
previous text.]
- "Metadata" refers generally
to "data about data." For the purposes of the GED, this
definition is too broad and must be distinguished from "Documentation"
(see below). As a working definition, "metadata" is
taken to mean field-coded (e.g., system-level) data used by software
to properly interpret, reference, or manipulate data files. [Please
use Browser's back button to return to previous text.]
- "Documentation" refers
generally to "information about datasets and data products."
In modern usage, the definition of this term overlaps with the
definition of "metadata" (see above). As a working definition
for the GED, "documentation" is taken to mean analog
or digital text documents read primarily by people to understand
datasets and data products. [Please use Browser's back button
to return to previous text.]