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Finding Your Place in the World

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Technology is helping people to navigate on land, at sea and in the air. On this field trip you will find out more about this location-based technology.

Everybody and everything is somewhere. The ‘where’ is a location on the ground. A map shows where things on the ground are. Everyday we use and collect information about where things are; this information is called geospatial data.

We all know something about where we are. When you close your eyes you can imagine where you are. For example, with your eyes closed you can point to the door you used to enter the room you are in. You might be able to point to where you live or where your school is. We all hold pictures in our heads that help us decide how to move across the school grounds, or travel home. These pictures are based on what we have done in the past.

Information about where things are is called location-based information or geospatial data.

What does geospatial data mean? 

  • geo – means the earth
  • spatial – means space (the space around us)
  • data – means a group of facts for example numbers, words, measurements or records of what we see

How do I know where I am?

Since the time of cavemen people have needed to know where they are and where to go to find food and shelter. People have been drawing pictures to show where things are for a very long time. Now technology is making it much easier to show where things are.

How do you use technology to help you know where you are?

Māori oral maps

Māori had named every feature of the land long before other people came to Aotearoa. Māori shared this information in kōrero or whakapapa (oral maps). Sometimes posts or piles of rocks were used to mark places. Māori did not draw maps.

Making maps

Information for making maps was first collected by people who recorded what they saw. These people were often sailors or explorers. People who have the job of measuring where things are placed so we can make maps are called surveyors. These days technology helps give us very accurate data about where things are on the surface of the Earth.

Audio Māori keywords: 


Think about the maps you have used over the last month... how were these maps made? How much information do they include?

An old map of Wellington shows property boundaries. How would maps like this be used? Image: LINZ.

This is an example of an old provincial map of Otago. How does this compare to more modern maps? Image: LINZ

This map shows old place names. Which names have been changed since this map was printed? Image: LINZ.

The use of mobile devices has led to an increase in the use of digital maps. How do you use digital maps? Image: LEARNZ.

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Mapping Our World

Comments

I wonder if fewer printed maps are being made and sold

Comment: 
I wonder if fewer printed maps are being made and sold, as more people find their way using digital tools like apps on their smartphones.

What materials do people use

Comment: 
What materials do people use to make maps?

Maps

Comment: 
Will we still use maps in the future or will they be a very rare thing? -J. Do many people have maps now or do people think they're very old-time and that they are a nuisance? -C.

I wonder how the Babylonians

Comment: 
I wonder how the Babylonians made maps because they could have only walked along the shore and draw at the same time.