Go back to B.J.S. Cahill Resource Page
Cahill Butterfly Map 1909
Cahill 1909
Go back to Gene Keyes home page

Cahill-Keyes M-layout world map silhouette including Antarctica
Cahill-Keyes 1975

Update 2012-01-15: Steve Waterman has just released a new improved version of his map, superseding the one discussed below. It makes some of the criticisms here obsolete, as well as many of my illustrations, and it now incorporates satellite imagery provided by Joe Roubal. But I will leave this review here as is, until I get around to nitpicking Waterman's new one.


Review of the Waterman World Map
Gene Keyes
2010-09-24

Waterman map, postcard version
Source: postcard version of Waterman map, distributed by ODT; scanned by GK.
© 1996, 2007 by Steve Waterman
.
             

Prologue: In 1996, Steve Waterman produced a 69 x 96 cm octahedral world map, resembling B.J.S. Cahill's almost forgotten 1909 Butterfly World Map. 1996 was also the year I acquired my first Mac, and went on the Internet, collecting maps among other things; but I did not stumble across the Waterman map until April 2006, at ODT, the map's distributor; via Carlos Furuti's website. How had I missed that one?

According to the Wayback Machine, it was early 2006 that Waterman's map appeared on the Net: at websites of ODT, and Carlos Furuti; and Waterman himself. So I was not as far out of the loop as I had feared.

(Latter three links above are their old 2006 versions, from Wayback, which lags at recording pages; Bob Abramms of ODT tells me that summer 2005 was when ODT gave the map its first exposure on the Web, apart from an abortive earlier version of Waterman's site.)

The Waterman map was quite a surprise to me, because between 1975 and 1984 I had been researching Cahill's works and archives, and doing my own re-design of his octahedral projection. But mine did not get beyond black-and-white outline prototypes, aiming at a scale of a 1/1,000,000 Megamap. Due to personal exigencies, this effort languished for nearly two decades. After retirement in 2003, I began refreshing my Cahill paper files and downloads; and in 2006, voilà, Waterman! A full-color Cahill-esque wall map, with boundaries, labels, and geophysical pigmentation! (Unlike Cahill's old b&w's.)

I bought several copies of the map from ODT, began exchanging e-mails with Waterman, and started the Wikipedia page about his projection, as well as my earlier one on Cahill himself. (Besides my own ongoing Cahill Resource as part of this website.)

Fig 1: This is (or was) the largest available online image of the full 1996 version:
For full-size (2 x) image, click in it once. To restore half-size, click in it twice.
Waterman map, largest online version
Source: Due to Wikipedia's officious and arcane rules, this map was deleted there (as was a portrait of B.J.S. Cahill). I acquired it from an old ODT website, where it was a hard-to-find embedded image without its own URL. The above jpeg at full size is:
http://www.genekeyes.com/WATERMAN REVIEW/ODT-biggest-Waterman.jpg
© 1996 Steve Waterman.

For some time I've been intending do a critical scrutiny of the Waterman map, which differs in significant detail from mine. By way of disclosure, let me say that while I admire the Waterman, I prefer the Cahill-Keyes. ;-) This review is not intended to disparage Waterman. Rather, it simply explicates our varying approaches — which were quite independent of each other — to a similar octahedral framework after Cahill. The compare-and-contrast commentary is divided into macro and micro considerations: the overall design (macro); and the octants' internal skeleton details (micro).

To summarize my observations:

On the plus side, Waterman's is a major accomplishment in the realm of the octahedral Butterfly Map. B.J.S. Cahill never published a wall-size, nor a color, version of his Butterfly (though he did prepare a very large hand-colored prototype, ca. 1912.).
  • Not only is the Waterman in color,
  • But it is much larger than any published Cahill;
  • It corrects Cahill's mistake of a 22.5º W dividing line by moving it to 20º W;
  • Unlike most world maps, it includes a laudable 5º graticule;
  • It has well-drawn colored geophysical areas, shadow-relief, and national borders.
On the neutral side is a difference of design approach between Waterman's map and mine. I prefer the "M" profile (for "right-side-up" place names); he goes with the classical Butterfly.

On the minus side, all the map's big flaws occur in the polar areas:
  • Ugly bites from the southern octants ruin the look and symmetry of the map;
  • Antarctica is needlessly relegated to a separate inset, contrary to the whole-earth principle pioneered by Buckminster Fuller's map (and echoed by mine);
  • The North and South Polar graticules are different: North having 5º all the way to 85º north, whereas the South omits large swathes of meridians at irregular intervals;
  • The North and South Polar parallels are rounded squares rather than circles, imparting an unnatural look to these areas;
  • The North Polar meridians are drawn at conspicuously different longitude-widths, which produce visible stretch-distortion of Ellesmere Island and Greenland.


Macro considerations (overall design)
1) Origins

To begin with, our starting points were completely different. Steve Waterman is a nuclear physicist and mathematician, interested in polyhedra and close-packing of spheres; while I am a former world politics prof seeking a more accurate canvas to display international affairs, etc.. His map derives from a mathematical conception of those close-packed spheres, while mine begins with geopolitical design precepts, e.g., to have a single world map at small to giant scales, and adapting Cahill to show proportional geocells across the entire map. His map is more attentive to precision of "equal area", while mine is focused on the principle of overall "global fidelity".

Unlike Cahill, we both converged at the meridian of 20º West as the key dividing line; but in most other particulars our details and designs are quite disparate.

2) Butterfly or "M"?

Our most visible variance is Waterman's use of Cahill's "Butterfly" pattern, with Pacific Ocean "wings" at left and right, whereas my design links Old and New worlds at the South Atlantic in an "M-shape" profile. As explained elsewhere, until switching to Cahill, I was engrossed in Buckminster Fuller's Dymaxion map, and had dismissed Cahill's Butterfly at first glance, because I wanted all my place names more or less horizontal — for a single all-purpose map at any scale from smallest to largest. This the "M" accomplished; one does not have to read Australia or Algeria sideways, as with a Buitterfly, or Dymaxion. (Of course, Earth has no "right side up, North-top"; merely ingrained habit.)

I think the Atlantic, and especially the Pacific, Butterflies can be useful as alternate and subsidiary profiles; but "M" is best as a general purpose view at all sizes.


3) Overhang Re-attachments

A key macro design detail, which I include, but Waterman doesn't, is completion of Eurasia, by joining Russia's Kamchatka peninsula with a repeat cutout of the area near Alaska; likewise for the far northeastern coast of Greenland; and likewise for Melville Island of the Canadian Arctic, just above Victoria Island. (Also, in my case, with the M-profile, Iceland must be re-united that way.)

Given that whole uninterrupted continents are a prime consideration of world map design (at least from Cahill's viewpoint, and mine, and Bucky Fuller's), it is an oversight not to round out Eurasia at least, and those other split islands as well. (See Fig. 2 below, 3rd item; and Fig. 11 below.)


4) Antactica

In my opinion, Waterman's biggest design drawback is to separate Antarctica from the rest of the map. In this respect, it is no different from many conventional world maps which have a separate inset for Antarctica. Also in my opinion, the Antarctica mistake is compounded by four ugly bites out of the southern octants  This ruins the symmetry of the northern and southern octants — though symmetry was Waterman's argument for placing Antarctica where he did. (Internal polar flaws are further detailed in the "Micro" section below.)

Cahill himself never rejoined the four installments of the icy continent in his Butterfly. (And not until his unpublished "C" version of 1936 (Fig. 9.2.1) did Cahill incorporate right-angle polar vertexes, instead of curved, to enable polar sub-assemblies.) It was Buckminster Fuller who emphasized including Antarctica as a complete and integral part of a world map. This can be accomplished in a Waterman or Cahill-Keyes by attaching a whole Antarctica to any of the four southern corners, preferably South America, as shown herewith:

Fig. 2, 3, 4: Top: Original Waterman (North Atlantic Butterfly), from a postcard version produced by ODT. © 1996, 2007 by Steve Waterman. Middle: Waterman (North Pacific Butterfly), cut and paste modified by Gene Keyes to include Antarctica. Bottom: Waterman, cut and paste modified by GK in a Cahill-Keyes M-profile, extending Eurasia, linking Antarctica, and filling cutouts. (Adjusted to a scale of 1/200,000,000, on my monitor, if width of Cahill-Keyes is 20 cm.)
Waterman, 3 variants
Source: scan of paper cut-and-paste composite by Gene Keyes, 2010. As mentioned also in Fig. 20 below, Steve feels that Fig. 4, the last image above, is not representative of Waterman maps, because selected portions of the globe are shown in duplicate.

Fig 5: (Incidentally, the classic view of Buckminster Fuller's Dymaxion Map is similar to the Pacific profile of Cahill or Waterman, if the Butterfly's Antarctica is attached (above, middle):
Fuller Dymaxion map, Raleigh edition
Source: Buckminster Fuller Institute http://bfi.easystorecreator.com/images/raleigh.jpg
© 1954, Buckminster Fuller and Shoji Sadao
Available from BFI.org and www.ODTmaps.com


Micro considerations (internal details)

Turning now to the arrangement within each octant, in particular the graticule:

1) The Graticule

Not being a mathematician, I can't speak to the fine points of how Waterman derived and laid out his graticule (nor how it would differ from his long-awaited second edition, said to be still more equal-area.). Instead, what I am doing here, as before, is to compare and contrast his graticular design, and mine. Elsewhere I have described in exhaustive detail how my design approached this fundamental question of a graticule for a world map: the total arrangement of meridians and parallels.

To backtrack a bit: in 1975, no sooner had I seized upon Cahill as a master profile for a world map (reconfigured to an M-shape), then I noticed that disparities in height or width of adjoining geocells were all too visible when the map is blown up to large scales, e.g., 1/1,000,000. I determined therefore, in my Cahill re-design to assure that all adjacent geocells were proportionate to one another, and the map as a whole, despite their progressive shrinkage toward the middle of each octrant.

I fullfilled that design fundamental, by (a) varying the angle of each meridian only in equal increments in each sector of the octant; (b) equisecting each meridian (with certain small exceptions detailed elsewhere, to avoid sags and cusps of the parallels when crossing octants); and (c) equisecting each parallel throughout.

Despite a superficial similarity of our octants, closer inspection reveals basic differences, especially at the poles. That old adjacent-geocell-disparity problem occurs in Waterman as well as Cahill, to be discussed further in Part C below.
A) Antarctic Polar segments
Antarctica shows three divergences between Waterman and Cahill-Keyes:
1) I use circular parallels, from the pole (i.e, 89°) to 75°. Waterman's parallels are flattened, and therefore his polar regions, when assembled, are more like rounded squares:

2) I use 5° meridians all the way to the poles. Waterman has two related problems here: (a) Unlike in his northern polar segments, not all southern 5° meridians extend to 85°; and (b), those southern meridians which reach 85° do so at irregular intervals of 20, 25, and 45º. (As often emphasized by me, I advocate a one-degree map wherever possible, and at minimum, five degrees, as in my sample below.)

3) Waterman's angular cuts are a further dissonance. In my Antarctica here, Fig. 7, I cut the segments along the curve of the 65th parallel. The overhang tip of the Antarctic Peninsula fits right into my Octant #7, South America.

Fig. 6: Waterman, Antarctica:
Waterman Antarctica
Source: scanned by GK at full size from
Waterman's 1996 wall map.
Fig. 7: Cahill-Keyes, Antarctica:
Cahill-Keyes Antarctica Source: Hand-drawn prototype,
Cahill-Keyes map, 1980 print 
Fig. 6a: Waterman, Arctic:
[Not included in Waterman's wall map; this is a cut-and-paste by GK.]

Waterman, Arctic


B) Arctic Polar incisions
Elsewhere I have argued that one of Cahill's design mistakes was an excessive incision from the poles of 22.5°, which sliced into northern Russia, and the Canadian mainland, detracting from the uninterrupted-continent forte of his octahedral. Therefore, in my re-design, I reduced the polar incision to 17°, so as to avoid splitting the Yamal Peninsula in Russia, and the large Victoria Island in the Canadian Arctic. Waterman's map, too, reduced the incision, but his goes a little past 18°, which does split into Yamal and Victoria.

These may seem like trivial details, but my standpoint is a world base map as large as 1/1,000,000 or bigger, where such gashes are far more enormous and ruinous.


Figs. 8-11: How a 17° vs. 18° polar incision affects Canada and Russia:
Fig. 8: Russia's Yamal Peninsula: split by Waterman 18°,,,
Waterman, Yamal peninsula
Fig. 9: ... but not by Cahill-Keyes 17° incision.
Cahill-Keyes map Yamal peninsula

Fig. 10: Canada's Victoria Island: split by Waterman 18°...
Waterman Victoria Island
Fig. 11:...but not by Cahill-Keyes 17° incision.
Cahill-Keyes Victoria Island
Just above Victoria, Melville Island is split, but re-united as shown.

Source: scans by GK of Waterman's wall map (1996), and Cahill-Keyes hand-drawn wall-map prototype (1980).


C) Polar Meridians and Arctic Distortions
Notice, furthermore, the difference between the polar meridians in Waterman, and Cahill-Keyes. In Waterman, the longitude widths are progressively narrower from the center to the edge of each octant. Mine are uniform all the way.

This narrowing and widening causes a distortion of Ellesmere island in Waterman — the "chess-knight" shaped one just northwest of Greenland  — , whereby the "head" is stretched much too far eastward. Instead, it should look more like the orthographic view on the right, or the globe photograph below (or my Ellesmere, above right, Fig. 11).

Fig. 12: Ellesmere Island distortion in Waterman.
Waterman map, Ellesmere Island
Source: Scan by GK from Waterman's wall map.
Fig. 13: Ellesmere Island, orthographic projection.
Orthographic view, Ellesmere Island
Source: R.L. Parker's SuperMap program, output from punchcards and adapted by GK in 1975.

Fig. 14: Hand-drawn Cahill-Keyes 5º graticule on a Replogle 10" globe. Here is where my precept of global fidelity comes into play. The test of a  map's fidelity is its comparison to a globe, with point for point consonance: whether octants, continents, islands, or geocells.
C-K globe, polar view
Source: digital photo by Gene Keyes. For explanation, click here and scroll to figs. 9.6.12 and 9.6.13; for more, click here.


And likewise, Waterman's Greenland is somewhat stretched westward, due to the extra spacing of the polar meridians toward the center from each direction. This point is underscored by Waterman's failure to show all the 5º meridians in his Antarctica assembly, where the unevenness of his longitudes would be more conspicuous. He also fails to show his 5º Arctic polar assembly, which would further expose the uneven spreads of those meridians around the pole. Below is an enlarged cut-and-paste I made, to illustrate that point. Notice that at 75º of latitude, the central longitudes of each octant are twice as wide as the outermost ones. This is the geocell-disparity problem I mentioned above.

Fig. 15: A closer examination of Waterman's Arctic region:
Waterman Arctic
Source: scan by GK to 222% of a cut-and-paste from Waterman's wall map.

D) Comparison of Waterman and Cahill-Keyes Graticules
Here also is a key structural difference — dare I say mathematical? — between the Cahill-Keyes Octant Graticule, and Waterman's. Notice above that his bend of the polar meridians occurs along the fold-line square with corners tangent to the 18º incision (i.e., at 72º), and enclosing most of  the 75th parallel. This results in that very visible compacting of longitude widths at the edges of each octant, and stretching of longitude widths in the middle of each octant, within their respective latitudes of 90 to 75º. Thus the bad distortion of northeast Ellesmere Island, and northwest Greenland, which fall within the stretched out longitudes in the center.

The variability of longitude widths occurs to a lesser extent in the rest of the map as well. They start out equal at the Equator, but in higher latitudes become fatter in the middle and thinner toward the edges.

The Cahill-Keyes Octant Graticule, on the other hand, maintains approximately equal longitude widths for each degree of latitude in the entire map. This is accomplished by arranging for all meridian angles to change only at a constant rate within the three sectors of the octant: polar, middle, and equatorial. The three swathes of meridians bend at respective joints which are not tangent to a parallel, (nor fold line), but are determined by trigonometry. (For more details, diagrams, and tables of the Cahill-Keyes, click here. Latitude heights per degree vary somewhat from one sector to the next, but not disproportionately.)

Figs. 16 and 17: Below are images of the bare graticules of the Waterman and Cahill-Keyes maps. At this small scale, it is hard to point out the internal differences; they would be much more apparent at 1/10,000,000, and especially at 1/1,000,000. But this is the only one I have of the Waterman graticule, and making it any larger spoils it:
Fig. 16: Waterman gratricule:
Waterman graticule
Source: Carlos Furuti

Likewise, this tiny monitor-rendition of the Cahill-Keyes cannot do justice to its weave (although its pdf, if printed out at this size, actually shows the 1º graticule, and millimeter grid):
Fig 17: Cahill-Keyes graticule
Cahill-Keyes 8-Octant Graticule
Source: Cahill-Keyes 8-Octant Graticule, designed and calculated by Gene Keyes; produced in OpenOffice.org Draw 2.0 with Perl programs and OOo macros by Mary Jo Graça.

However, if the above image's pdf is blown up to a scale 10 times larger, about 1/20,000,000, the proportionality of the 1º and 5º geocells is far more visible (despite the monitor's zaggies, unlike a printed version). I am including my own graticule here, because, being accustomed to its lay of the meridians, uniformly spaced from the poles onward, is what makes me aware of the uneven spacing of Waterman's polar meridians. (As of now, I could declare that I have a better graticule, and Waterman has better geophysical content!)
Fig. 18: Cahill-Keyes graticule, 10x larger
Cahill-Keyes graticule at 1/20,000,000
Source: Cahill-Keyes 8-Octant Graticule, designed and calculated by Gene Keyes;
produced in OpenOffice.org Draw 2.0 with Perl programs and OOo macros by Mary Jo Graça
.


Epilogue: Further notes on the development of the Waterman World Map

Better mousetraps don't always succeed, at least in the short run. The antiquated Mercator and the horrible Homolosine are still everywhere. Cahill's maps (and Fuller's) were both commercial flops, and so far Waterman's is in their august company. (Shoji Sadao, Fuller's co-cartographer of the Dymaxion Map, told me that when they published it in 1954, they expected the money to come rolling in, but no such thing happened.)

Waterman wrote me that after he printed the map in 1996, he sold a very few copies from his home. In 2005, he signed an exclusive contract with ODT to promote and distribute the map (in wall map, post-card, and magnet versions). However, despite ODT's best efforts, sales were very slow, and an expected second edition, mathematically refined, could not be funded. In 2010, ODT yielded back the rights to Waterman, though ODT will still be selling its existing supply.

In September 2010, Steve began offering on his website single-copy big-poster size versions of his map at several larger scales than the original. While their internal details are the same, he modified the color scheme to lighter hues, changed the ancillary materials, and provided a Pacific view option as well as Atlantic. (See his website.)

As for myself, I am a short-term pessimist and long-term optimist about the prospects for a better map in Cahill's footsteps. I wish Waterman all the best for his; while I will be pursuing mine as a hobby, and open-source project.


Fig. 20: Another doctored Waterman map; on wall behind my desk: This is the 1996 version, cut-and-pasted by GK into the Cahill-Keyes M-profile; again, filling the tooth-sockets with the missing teeth of Antarctica. (Note: Steve feels that my reconfigured images are not representative of Waterman maps, based on the grounds that selected portions of the globe are shown in duplicate.)
Waterman map in Cahill-Keyes M-profile
Source: 1996 Waterman map, re-arranged by GK; insets are (L) Pacific Butterfly, from wall map itself; (R) Atlantic Butterfly (postcard version); (top), Arctic assembly, cut-and-paste by GK. Digital photo by GK.

Fig. 20, 21, 22 (clockwise from bottom): As before, I am including my own maps, to wrap up this compare-contrast review. Below, (lower left), same map as Fig. 20 above, flanked by two Cahill-Keyes versions. These are all squeezed onto the wall behind my desk. Upper map is 1/20,000,000, and 2 meters long. Waterman map on lower left is 1/43,000,000. C-K map on lower right is 1/50,000,000, adjacent to a 10-inch globe with the same scale and 5º graticule. This synoptic pairing of same-scale and same-graticule globes and maps is what I have been aiming at for a long time.
For full-size (2.3 x) image, click in it once. To restore small size, click in it twice.
Waterman map & 2 Cahill-Keyes maps
Source: Digital photo by Gene Keyes 2010-09-24. Upper map, hand drawn prototype ©1978, 1980 by Gene Keyes; lower right, assembled from prototype offset prints (© 1978, 1980) by GK; lower left, modified composite by GK (2010) of Waterman World Map © 1996, 2007 by Steve Waterman. (But not representative of his, as explained in Fig. 20 above.)


So in sum, Steve Waterman has produced a splendid 5º octahedral map; professionally done in a size and color that would make Cahill proud, despite its variation in origin and detail from his. But I certainly wish that the polar areas were designed differently, both as to internal graticule, and external placement of Antarctica, without chopping off the southern chunks.

Go back to B.J.S. Cahill Resource Page

Go back to Gene Keyes home page