August 7, 2020


“This year�s map pays tribute to the pioneering mapmakers of the Age of Discovery, incorporating elements of medieval and renaissance cartography. In addition to serving as navigational aids, maps from this era were highly sought-after works of art, often adorned with fanciful illustrations of real and imagined dangers at sea. Such embellishments largely disappeared in the early 1600s, pushing modern map design into a purely functional direction.

To bring back the lost aesthetic that vanished along with these whimsical details, TeleGeography referenced a variety of resources in the design process. One of the most invaluable was Chet Van Duzer�s Sea Monsters in Medieval and Renaissance Maps book, which provides arguably the most complete history of the evolution of sea monsters and map design from this period. Our final product is a view of the global submarine cable network seen through the lens of a bygone era.

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subduedzhongqiu all the snowskin mooncakes and pu-erh could not restore festivity to what was a very subdued 中秋 this year. the haze (quite the worst in recent
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sumatrasquall with the southwest monsoons come sumatra squalls, lines of thunderstorms that form at night over the eponymous neighbour island, and come rushing