Thursday, September 18, 2025

Losing BIG, Very SAD!

The Economist has mapped President Trump’s approval rating in each state, and the results look bleak for the president and the Republican Party ahead of next year’s midterm elections. Drawing on data from YouGov polling, The Economist finds that Trump holds a positive net approval rating in only 11 states.

In its cartogram of Donald Trump's Approval Rating, the magazine shows that the president enjoys double-digit positive approval in just three states — Idaho, West Virginia, and Wyoming. Conversely, in 39 states and in Washington, D.C., Trump has a negative approval rating, and in 11 of those his disapproval exceeds approval by more than 30 percentage points.
 

This Strength in Numbers interactive map of Trump's Net Approval Rating in Each State shows a slightly better picture for the president.

One reason it looks different from The Economist’s approval map is that it doesn’t rely on new state-by-state polls. Instead, it models estimates for each state by:

  • starting with Trump’s 2024 presidential vote margin in that state,
  • comparing his 2024 national vote margin with his current national net approval,
  • then shifting every state’s 2024 result by that same national swing.

A separate Strength in Numbers chart shows 53.8% of Americans disapprove of Trump’s performance while 42% approve, giving him a net approval of -11.8 points (about 12 points under water). The map uses that -11.8-point national figure to adjust the 2024 election results and estimate his current net approval rating in each state. The map would look a little different using The Economist's -17% approval rating.

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

Trump's DEPT of ILL HEALTH

NBC News and Stanford University have created a powerful interactive map that visualizes the percentage of students vaccinated for measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) at the county level. The map is a key component of their six-month investigation - Childhood vaccination rates are backsliding across the U.S.

What the Map Shows (and Doesn't Show)

The map's core purpose is to show the current state of vaccination rates, using a choropleth map where each county is shaded based on its MMR vaccination percentage. This is effective for identifying areas with low vaccination rates, which the accompanying article rightly highlights as a growing public health concern. The use of a simple, dark-to-light color scale makes the data easy to interpret at a glance.

However, the map doesn't visualize the change in vaccination rates over time. The investigative article emphasizes that America is "dangerously backsliding," but the map itself only provides a static snapshot of the latest data. It doesn't show where these steepest declines in vaccinations are occurring.

The Missing Piece Map View

After Trump appointed the barely-sentient Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to the position of Secretary of Health and Human Services, there has been a growing tide of government sponsored anti-vaccine messaging - with the obvious concurrent rise in public health scares.

To visualize this fall in vaccination rates the map would need to also display the percentage point change over a specific period, perhaps the last five or ten years. Such a map would more visually connect the current public health crisis to the rise of anti-vaccine sentiment and misinformation. It would directly show where the most significant impacts of these movements, often amplified by political figures and conspiracy theories, are being felt. 

Also See 

CDC Map of Measles Cases
CDC Map of Vaccination Rates for Kindergarteners (which curiously shows New Mexico as having a good rate of MMR vaccinations and not one of the worst rates - as shown on the NBC map)

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Is This 2024's Most Detailed Election Map?

VoteHub has launched a new interactive national precinct map for the 2024 election. The map is designed to provide a granular look at the US Presidential election results, allowing users to explore the data at the most detailed level possible.

The 2024 Election at a Precinct Level is a goldmine for election junkies, providing several features that go beyond simply showing who won which state. Users can explore results, compare them to the 2020 and 2016 presidential elections to understand vote shifts, and even see how different demographic groups voted using advanced statistical methods.

One of the most innovative features is the vote density mode, which allows users to see election data in three dimensions. This mode visually represents the concentration of votes, rather than just the geographic size of an area, which helps to illustrate the adage that "land doesn’t vote; people do."

The map also boasts a powerful set of filtering and selection tools. You can filter the map by state, county, metro area, city, and even specific congressional and legislative districts. By simply entering the name of the area you're interested in, you can instantly view the aggregate results for that entire area.

Also See

The NYT's An Extremely Detailed Map of the 2024 Election

Monday, September 15, 2025

What States Would You Live In?

Last year I created the World Level O map for Tripgeo. This fun travel-tracking tool colors the countries of the world based on whether you have lived there, stayed for a while, visited, passed through or never been. You are then awarded a level based on how well you’ve “covered” the globe.

States I'd Live In is a map in the same sort of personal tracking ballpark. However on this map instead of coloring the countries of the world based on your travel experience the objective is to show which countries you would live in. Your preferences are visualized using 5 different colors to indicate Never, Reluctantly, Maybe, Willing and Absolutely.

States I'd Live in includes a number of different regional maps and individual country maps, where you can show which states you would live in within individual countries. In fact I became aware of the map because of the number of people sharing their maps of the United States. Judging from these shared maps, Democratic and Republican supporters seem to have almost diametrically opposed ideas about the best states to live in.

“States I’d Live In” also features a fascinating Stats page that ranks individual states, regions, and countries based on votes from all users. According to the data, Colorado is the most popular U.S. state to live in, while New Zealand tops the list of countries worldwide. The United States itself sits in 17th place, just below Portugal.

At the other end of the scale, Mississippi is the least-favoured U.S. state, and Djibouti ranks last among the 175 countries on the world map.

Sunday, September 14, 2025

Here Be Animated Monsters

One of the most underused features in Maplibre and MapBox is the video overlay, which enables developers to display a video on top of a base map layer.

The Hailou AI Video Generator currently has a trial that allows you to create unlimited videos from a starting and finishing image. I decided to make use of this offer to create an animated sea monster. First I asked Gemini to create two images of the same kraken monster with its tentacles in different positions.

I then asked Hailuo to create an animated Kraken sea monster starting from one image and ending with the other. The result is a short video of a kraken waving its tentacles.

 

You can see this sea monster on my Animated Seamonster map. To place the kraken video on the map, MapLibre uses a video source and a matching raster layer. You supply the video file (for example, kraken.mp4) and define four geographic coordinates that mark its corners on the globe. MapLibre stretches the video between those points so it appears as part of the map, following the same panning and zooming behavior as other layers. By adjusting the bounding box, you can position the animation anywhere - in this case, above the ocean.

Observant users might notice that the background color of the video does not quite match the color of the ocean. I attempted to change the background color of the OpenFreeMap base layer in Maputnik. As you can see I seem to have given Maputnik the wrong color.

Saturday, September 13, 2025

The 3D Dot Map

Everybody loves a good dot map, such as:

However the Toronto Dot Density Map is not just your average, run-of-the-mill dot map of census data. Yes, the map uses 2021 Canadian Census data to create dot map layers of gender, age, income, ethnicity, immigration, commute modes and commute time in Toronto - but it is also much more.

Press the 3D View button on the map and the hundreds of thousands of dots become a shimmering point cloud, forming a landscape of population density across the city. Peaks reveal Toronto’s most crowded neighbourhoods, while valleys trace the less densely populated areas of the city. The colours of the dots still represent the chosen demographic variable, letting you see not only where people live, but also how age, income, or cultural background shape the city.

The Toronto Dot Density Map is the work of the School of Cities at the University of Toronto. 

Friday, September 12, 2025

The Google Maps Platform Awards Winners

Google has announced the winners of the very first Google Maps Platform Awards. The awards were launched to mark the 20th anniversary of the release of the Google Maps API and were open to anyone who has used the Google Maps Platform over the past two decades.

As one of the judges for the competition, I can attest to the overall quality of the maps submitted. Winners were named in 10 different categories, and a Grand Prize was awarded to the overall winner of the Google Maps Platform Awards.

The Grand Prize Winner - Innobrix

Innobrix uses Google’s 3D Map Tiles and the Geocoding API to create an advanced planning environment for architects and builders, allowing them to visualize designs in real-world contexts.

Normally, you need to be an Innobrix customer to access its interactive planning tools. However, for the Google Maps Platform Awards, the company created a special demo map. This demo lets you explore how parcel maps can be integrated directly on top of a 3D Google Map, and how different types of 3D buildings can be placed within a planning site.

10 Category Winners

Daryaft - First Place - Best of Immersive

You can view the winners, runners-up, and fan-vote selections across all 10 categories on the Google Maps Platform Blog. First and second place in each category were chosen by the competition judges, while the Fan Vote winners were decided by the public.

There are many exceptional maps to explore among the winners, runners-up, and fan favorites (plus five honorable mentions). When you click on the links in the Google Maps blog post - look for the 'see in devpost' link to read more and to find the actual link to the winning map.'

Thursday, September 11, 2025

Data Visualization in VR

Flow Immersive is a platform that specializes in immersive data visualization for augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR) environments. It transforms data into interactive 3D visual stories - called “Flows” - which can be viewed on a variety of devices, including VR headsets, desktop browsers, and mobile screens in AR.

CO₂ Emissions Per Household is a demonstration “Flow” that uses a 3D map to visualize the amount of CO₂ emitted by households across the USA. As shown in the video above, the 3D map is visually compelling and, I assume, looks particularly impressive when viewed through a VR headset. Unfortunately, I don’t find the interface very user-friendly.

On the map, colored circles indicate levels of CO₂ emissions, while height represents population density. Users can zoom in and click on individual markers to view the exact amount of CO₂ emitted per person and per household in each ZIP code area. However, there doesn’t appear to be an option to pan the map. The gestures that typically allow panning on an online map instead rotate the scene around a 3D axis. As a result, it’s impossible to obtain a straightforward overview of coastal cities - or any location near the edge of the map - and this makes the data difficult to read.

As far as map visualizations go, I would say that, at the moment, while the immersive 3D map is visually impressive, Flow is not particularly effective as a tool for data visualization. It prioritizes aesthetic impact over clarity, making it hard for users to access and interpret the underlying data. I don't have VR glasses so I may be being unfair here - if in VR there are more intuitive controls and clearer ways to view the actual ZIP code values for coastal cities.

Wednesday, September 10, 2025

The True Size of Africa

There has been much written in recent weeks about the African Union's endorsement of the Correct the Map campaign. Reuters The true size of Africa is one of the better explanations of why Africa is encouraging the use of the Equal Earth map projection over other maps.

In a neatly illustrated article Reuters explains how for centuries, the Mercator projection has dominated classrooms and navigation, and how its distortions have profoundly misrepresented Africa’s true scale. A couple of animated maps are used to show how on Mercator maps, Greenland looks nearly the same size as Africa despite being 14 times smaller, while Canada and Russia also appear deceptively comparable. 

In reality, Africa spans 30.3 million square kilometers - about three times Canada’s size. Another comparative map is used by Reuters to show how Africa is also larger than the U.S., China, India, and much of Europe combined. The African Union, argue that this long-standing distortion is more than a cartographic quirk; it has fueled perceptions of Africa as “marginal” despite its vast size and significance.

The Correct The Map campaign is pushing for adoption of the Equal Earth projection, which preserves proportional land areas more accurately than Mercator while still offering a practical global view.

Tuesday, September 09, 2025

The College Football Imperialism Map

The CFB Charts Imperialism Map is a fan-created, season-long project that turns the college football season into a map-based "conquest" game. It started on Reddit and Twitter a few years ago and has become a tradition among college football fans.

Here’s how it works (I think):

  • Each FBS team begins the season owning the county in which its school is located (and probably all the nearest counties).
  • After every week, the results of the games determine which teams expand their "territory" on the map.
  • When Team A plays Team B, the winner takes over all of the loser’s territory.
  • That means if a team beats another team that has already conquered a lot of counties, they instantly inherit all of their counties.
The College Football Imperialism Map works on the same principle, except instead of counties it uses a voronoi map.

On this map (presumably) at the beginning of the season the USA is divided up into voronoi territories based on the closest college football team. Again after each game the winning team conquers all the losing team's territory. This includes all the land that the losing team might have previously won from other teams, leading to cascading changes. If the losing team had no territory, then no land is transferred.

Monday, September 08, 2025

The Ancient Ley Lines of Britain Map

The idea of ley lines was first proposed in the 1920s by the amateur archaeologist Alfred Watkins. In his book, 'The Old Straight Track', Watkins suggested that many ancient sites in Britain - such as standing stones, barrows, and old churches - could be joined by drawing straight lines across the landscape. He believed these alignments were not accidental but reflected a deliberate system of connecting key points across space, which might once have served as navigational or trade routes.

A distinctive part of Watkins’ theory was his belief in dodmen, or ancient surveyors, who supposedly laid out these lines across the countryside with surveying rods. He imagined that these early engineers intentionally aligned sites to create a coherent network of straight tracks. One crucial aspect of Watkins' theory is often misunderstood: he did not believe people physically walked in perfectly straight lines. Instead, he argued that the straight "ley" was a conceptual line of sight between prominent landmarks. While travelers still had to navigate around natural obstacles like hills and rivers, they would use the visible monuments as a series of beacons to guide them toward their ultimate destination.

I have no doubt that throughout history people have used prominent ancient landmarks as navigational aids. Even today, with GPS and mobile maps, we still navigate primarily by sight. Prominent topographic features such as rivers, valleys, and mountains have always been used to help navigate the landscape, and ancient monuments like hillforts and megaliths have undoubtedly served as waymarks for travelers.

However, while I think it’s very likely people have used landmarks as practical aids for finding their way, the idea of a prehistoric surveying class (dodmen) systematically imposing straight alignments seems improbable. 

In recent decades ley lines have taken on a different life altogether. Rather than being viewed mainly as old trade routes or alignments, they have become part of a spiritual and mystical interpretation of the landscape. Many people today see ley lines as channels of earth energy, linking sacred sites into a web of unseen power. This belief that ley lines are natural channels of energy ignores one fundamental fact. You can find straight lines connecting ancient monuments everywhere and anywhere you look.

To illustrate this point, I created an interactive map that allows you to plot straight lines between ancient sites. The way it works is simple: you can click anywhere on the map, draw a line across the landscape, and almost inevitably that line will intersect with a castle or standing stone(s). This isn’t because the sites were all deliberately aligned in prehistory, or were built on a channel of natural Earth energy, but rather because Britain is so densely dotted with ancient and historic features that some degree of alignment is bound to occur purely by chance.

When you click on the Ley Line Locator map, the code looks for the two nearest sites - either castles, ancient stones, or both - that line up most closely in a straight line with your chosen point. It does this by calculating the angles formed between your click and pairs of nearby sites, searching for the combination that produces the angle closest to 180 degrees (a perfectly straight alignment). Once the best match is found, the map automatically draws a line through your location and the two sites, and highlights them so you can see the alignment. This means that no matter where you click, even with only a few hundred locations, the map will almost always be able to produce a “ley line”.

Saturday, September 06, 2025

Isochrone Tokyo

Tokyo has one of the most comprehensive public transit systems in the world. Curtis Fenner has built an isochrone map that allows you to see where you can travel in the city by train in a given time.

The purpose of the map is to help people make crucial decisions about where to live by visualizing real-world commute times. It effectively achieves this by not only showing the reach of the entire network but also highlighting areas that are surprisingly difficult to get to, revealing what Curtis calls "train deserts" -pockets in the city that are more than a ten-minute walk from a station.

Users can input a single destination into the map How Far Can Trains Take Me in Tokyo? to see all the areas reachable within a specified commute time. The map also has a feature that allows for the addition of multiple destinations. When more than one destination is entered, the map blends the travel times, which can be useful for planning a meeting spot or finding a place to live that optimizes the commutes for multiple people. The settings panel also allows users to adjust the maximum door-to-door commute time and the maximum walk time to a station.

Tokyo has around 100 different transit lines and more than a dozen different train operators. These private operators typically do not publish their schedules in an easily usable format, which means most maps simply can't account for them. This map, however, tackles this challenge head-on by using a combination of web scraping and estimation to fill in the data gaps, resulting in a more complete travel time map of the city.

If you are interested in exploring an isochrone map of your city then you might find one under the Maps Mania isochrone tag.

Friday, September 05, 2025

The 2025 Fall Foliage Map

The nights are beginning to draw in which can only mean one thing: autumn is nearly upon us! And for "leaf-peepers" everywhere, that means it's time to consult the annual Smoky Mountain 2025 Fall Foliage Map. This incredibly popular interactive map is back to help you predict the best time to see the vibrant reds, oranges, and yellows of fall across the United States.

Every year, Smoky Mountain releases this map, which plots the predicted progression of fall colors across the contiguous United States. Using a sophisticated data model that incorporates historical and forecasted temperature and precipitation, as well as tree types, the map provides a county-by-county forecast.

The map's interface is straightforward and user-friendly. A date control at the bottom allows you to slide through the weeks, from early September to late November, to see the expected leaf color progression. It's a fantastic tool for planning a scenic drive or a hiking trip to catch the leaves at their peak.

Also See:

  • Explore Fall's Fall Foliage Map 2025 - this is a great alternative fall foliage map that provides a real-time, frequently updated map based on 'the latest reports gathered from hundreds of sources throughout the country'.
  • New England Fall Foliage Map - if your interest is more regional, this map focuses specifically on the progression of colors throughout New England.

Thursday, September 04, 2025

Europe's Migration Crisis

The Guardian's map, Visualised: Europe's population crisis, is an effective and stark visualization of the continent's emerging demographic issue. The map's primary purpose is to highlight the dramatic difference migration makes to Europe's population projections by 2100. It successfully achieves this by comparing Europe's projected population "With migration" and "Without migration".

It is often stated by many of our politicians that Europe needs to curb migration. However, this map shows that the opposite is true. Projections show that migration is essential for addressing the continent's long-term demographic and economic challenges.

The map reveals that without migration nearly all of Europe is going to see a massive fall in population. The only exceptions being a small area around Paris and in parts of the Republic of Ireland. The Guardian explains that this widespread decline will pose serious economic challenges for Europe. Without young migrants a shrinking workforce and an aging population will put immense pressure on social and economic systems. 

By 2100, the proportion of people aged 65 or over is projected to rise significantly, leading to slower economic growth, increased tax burdens, and a greater demand for health and social care services. This demographic pressure is already evident in many EU countries and will be exacerbated further by a lack of migration.

Also See

Demographic Boom and Bust - an interactive map from Zeit that shows the areas of Europe that experienced population growth and population loss in Europe from 2011-2017.

Wednesday, September 03, 2025

Fall is Warmer Now

Meteorological fall started on September 1, but if you live in the contiguous U.S., you may not have noticed the typical crisp, cool air. That's because the season has been steadily warming for decades. Since 1970, average fall temperatures have risen in every single county in the country.

On average, fall temperatures are now a remarkable 2.8°F warmer than they were in the early 1970s. This might seem like a small number, but it has significant impacts on our environment, from delayed leaf changes to extended allergy seasons. It's a clear signal of our changing climate, right in the middle of a season we often associate with cooling down.

You can explore how much warmer autumnal temperatures are where you live on Climate Central's Fall Warming. The map reveals that the Southwest is experiencing some of the fastest-rising fall temperatures, with many counties in New Mexico and Arizona seeing rises of over 4°F.

You can click on individual counties on the interactive map to see the change in average fall temperature (°F) since 1970. For a deeper dive, you can download a static image of the map and line charts showing the average rise in fall temperatures from Climate Central's 2025 2025 Fall Package.

Tuesday, September 02, 2025

A Typographic Map of the World

Last week someone posted an animation of a Typographic Map of France on Reddit. This map gradually added the names of 1,156 French communes to a blank canvas, starting with those with the largest populations. I really liked the effect of the animation and remembered that TripGeo's Scrambled Maps has a database of around 11,000 cities worldwide - complete with population data. That meant I should be able to create a global version of the map.

My interactive Typographic Map provides a unique way to watch the world’s major cities appear one by one. Instead of loading all city labels at once, the map gradually reveals them in order of population size - starting with the largest cities and working its way down to smaller ones. With more than 11,000 places in the dataset, you can sit back and watch the planet fill up with names, or take control of the pace with a few handy buttons (it should only take around 1 hour 30 minutes to see all 11k labels added to the map).

How It Works

When the map loads, it starts with a blank white canvas. Every few hundred milliseconds, another city label is added. The order isn’t random - cities are sorted by population, so megacities like Tokyo, Delhi, and Shanghai appear first, followed by mid-sized cities and eventually smaller towns.

Each city is added as a point feature with a text label. If you enable the optional circle layer, cities are also drawn as semi-transparent dots sized according to their population - larger cities get bigger dots.

Humanizing a Sea of Dots

Dot maps can be a powerful way to convey the scale of large numbers. But when each dot represents a human life, there’s a risk that the individual stories behind those numbers will be lost. Reuters’ latest visualization of European migration tackles this challenge head-on: instead of starting with statistics, it begins with a close-up of a single overcrowded boat, allowing viewers to see the people on board before zooming out to reveal the thousands who have died or disappeared while attempting to cross the Mediterranean Sea.

Reuters’ latest story on migration routes to Europe features a striking 3D visualization of a boat full of migrants. This close-up view of a 3D model then seamlessly transitions to an overhead map view, showing the boat adrift in the Mediterranean Sea. By beginning with a realistic depiction of people precariously packed into a small vessel, the piece powerfully humanizes the thousands of yellow dots on the map - each representing a migrant who has died or disappeared while attempting to cross the Mediterranean since 2015.

Last year, at least 3,812 people died while trying to reach Europe. In Stranded at Sea, Reuters explains how Europe’s renewed focus on deterring migrant crossings has left distress calls unanswered by government agencies. At the same time, Italy has introduced policies aimed at limiting the number of NGO rescues in the Mediterranean.

Towards the end of the article, Reuters returns to its 3D model to show how the overloaded boat set off from Libya with an engine too small for the number of passengers on board and with insufficient fuel to reach its intended destination. Illustrations of the boat also highlight how, because the vessel was so overcrowded, it sat lower in the water and was therefore more easily overwhelmed by waves that at this time of year “can be up to around two metres high.”

Monday, September 01, 2025

The Methane Risk Map

In 2024, atmospheric methane levels reached their highest point in more than 800,000 years, with the oil and gas sector playing a major role in that surge. The methane leaks from oil and gas operations don’t just warm the planet - they also release toxic pollutants that can harm people’s health.

The Methane Risk Map plots significant methane leak events across the United States. By combining emissions data with air quality modeling, it not only identifies where methane “super-emitter” events occurred but also illustrates where nearby communities may have been exposed to hazardous co-pollutants.

When you select a methane leak event on the interactive map, a heatmap visualization shows the areas potentially affected by the leak. The sidebar provides additional details, including the event date, emissions rate, estimated number of people impacted, and the number of sensitive facilities (such as schools and hospitals) within the affected area.

By highlighting sensitive sites such as schools, childcare centers, nursing homes, and hospitals, the map emphasizes how methane leaks may disproportionately affect vulnerable populations. Methane is invisible and odorless, making its risks hard to detect. The map aims to make those hidden dangers visible, and will hopefully empower communities and policymakers with evidence they can potentially act on.