TY - JOUR
T1 - Mapping the Great Lakes
T2 - The somageography of water and land, 1615-1828
AU - Simeone, Michael
AU - Morris, Christopher
AU - McHenry, Kenton
AU - Markley, Robert
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © Copyright 2019 by Eighteenth-Century Fiction, McMaster University Copyright: Copyright 2019 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Building on our earlier computational analysis of 237 digitized maps of the Great Lakes, we use maps and accounts of Lake Huron, bookended by those of Samuel de Champlain (1616) and Henry Bayfield (1828), to explore the concept of “somageography”: how first-hand experiences with natural environments are filtered and reconfigured by map-makers, rendering maps as irreducibly complex representations of particular human and environmental conditions. While maps of Lake Huron, in particular, may appear to become more accurate by the 1820s, Bayfield's detailed charts are simply epistemologically frozen moments when the individual map was sketched, which were then months or years later reproduced as though they were an unproblematic, even ontological, representation of an environmentally dynamic and climatologically unstable region. Our computational approach paradoxically reinforces our sense that the methods for mapping the natural world during the long eighteenth century cannot be understood apart from observational and biophysical experience-somageography-in a dynamic landscape.
AB - Building on our earlier computational analysis of 237 digitized maps of the Great Lakes, we use maps and accounts of Lake Huron, bookended by those of Samuel de Champlain (1616) and Henry Bayfield (1828), to explore the concept of “somageography”: how first-hand experiences with natural environments are filtered and reconfigured by map-makers, rendering maps as irreducibly complex representations of particular human and environmental conditions. While maps of Lake Huron, in particular, may appear to become more accurate by the 1820s, Bayfield's detailed charts are simply epistemologically frozen moments when the individual map was sketched, which were then months or years later reproduced as though they were an unproblematic, even ontological, representation of an environmentally dynamic and climatologically unstable region. Our computational approach paradoxically reinforces our sense that the methods for mapping the natural world during the long eighteenth century cannot be understood apart from observational and biophysical experience-somageography-in a dynamic landscape.
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U2 - https://doi.org/10.3138/ecf.32.1.169
DO - https://doi.org/10.3138/ecf.32.1.169
M3 - Review article
SN - 0840-6286
VL - 32
SP - 169
EP - 194
JO - Eighteenth-Century Fiction
JF - Eighteenth-Century Fiction
IS - 1
ER -