The world map isn’t shaped like a pizza, it’s more like a squished pancake that people have tried to fix for centuries.
Maps are like pictures of the Earth, but they’re not always perfect. Imagine you and your friend both draw a picture of the same playground from different sides, yours might look stretched out, while theirs is squeezed in. That’s what happens with maps: depending on how we make them, continents can look bigger or smaller than they really are.
Why Maps Are Like Squished Pancakes
When people first made maps, they tried to show the whole world on a flat piece of paper, like flattening a pancake. But the Earth is round, so this makes some parts look squashed and others stretched out.
Think about it: if you draw your room on a flat piece of paper from above, everything looks normal. But if you try to draw it from one corner, the walls might seem really long and the floor tiny, just like how maps can make continents look weirdly big or small depending on which side of the Earth you’re looking at.
That’s why sometimes maps don’t look like what we expect, they're just a different way of showing the world! The world map isn’t shaped like a pizza, it’s more like a squished pancake that people have tried to fix for centuries.
Maps are like pictures of the Earth, but they’re not always perfect. Imagine you and your friend both draw a picture of the same playground from different sides, yours might look stretched out, while theirs is squeezed in. That’s what happens with maps: depending on how we make them, continents can look bigger or smaller than they really are.
Examples
- A kid draws the world with Europe in the center because that's how they learned it in school.
- An ancient map shows Africa as a tiny island near Asia, making it look like the whole world is around Europe.
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See also
- How Does A Brief History of Cartography and Maps Work?
- What are ancient geographers?
- What are contour lines?
- Why Do We Use Different Kinds of Maps for Navigation?
- Why all world maps are wrong?