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  1. Rivers and lakes of Wisconsin. I see the broken lines...turns out it takes more effort than I anticipated to resolve. I can fix the entire river, but it breaks when I intersect.

    Would appreciate any suggestions.

    adventures, an tale

  2. Land cover of India. This was edifying. I had no idea so much land was devoted to crops. I mean, I sorta knew but seeing it this way really hammered it home. This was also the render that drove me to pure GDAL for raster operations.

    adventures, an tale

  3. Land cover of Egypt.

    adventures, an tale

  4. Rivers of Iberia.

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  5. Land cover of South Korea.

    adventures, an tale

  6. Freshwater major habitat types of Thailand.

    adventures, an tale

  7. And another one with rivers of Germany.

    adventures, an tale

  8. Back to the United States with rivers of New Jersey.

    adventures, an tale

  9. Land cover of Sri Lanka. The last time I did anything related to land cover was *checks history* almost three years ago. And I remember why: I spend way too much time on colours, just to end back up with the original palette.

    I did find an alternative palette from the cartographer Tom Patterson which I liked but it doesn't show too well when lit.

    adventures, an tale

  10. Heading outside the United States with rivers of India.

    adventures, an tale

  11. Rivers of Rhode Island. No labels but should there be?

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  12. Rivers of Texas two ways, one with labels, one without.

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  13. The topography of race and income in New York City.

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  14. The topography of income: New Jersey.

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  15. The topography of race in New Jersey.

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  16. The topography of race in the great state of California. I've yet to solve the problem of overlapping points, which is why the map with all groups look different. I've access to height (since it's 3D) but it doesn't quite work here. Hmm.

    adventures, an tale

  17. The topography of race and income in Manhattan, NY. Rather revealing in a number of ways, no?

    adventures, an tale

  18. Been questioning the point of sharing stuff lately. It feeds the machine and people use the machine to copy and profit. But I remembered why I started sharing in the first place—better here than sitting on my hard disk.

    So here's the topography of race in the conterminous United States.

    adventures, an tale

  19. Introducing population tiles of France.

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  20. Did this a while back but forgot to share: the Danube basin.

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  21. The Paraná basin.

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  22. Average monthly precipitation of the world, 1970–2000

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  23. Today's basin is the Yangtze.

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  24. A belated 2024 round-up. 30 days, 28 visualisations. First time in four years I missed not one, but two. For some reason, it was a pretty rough month. Still mostly the and where possible.

  25. Turns out I shared over 2 gigs (3,000+) of visualisations since 2020, which is when I really got into the . And it all started with a ggplot sword and a spinning pig.

    Talk about obsession. Too bad I don't see much improvement. I should actually learn how to make maps.