bloggggg

Home  |  Live  |  Science  |  Lifestyle  |  Entertainment  |  Broadcast  |  Games  |  eBooks  |  Astounds  |  Adbite  |  Cricbell  |  Cyber  |  Idea  |  Digital  |  Privacy  |  Publish  |  ePaper  |  Contact  .Subscribe.Subscribe.Subscribe.Subscribe.Subscribe.Subscribe.Subscribe.Subscribe.Subscribe
Subscribe

Friday, 9 December 2011

Stick Charts and Woven Branch Maps

Maqpie And Whiskey Jack: By: minouette (scientist  by  vocation  artist  by avocation),  Via  I'M  REVOLTING  come  these  woven  branch  maps, described  as  a  collaboration  between  architect  Tim  Koelle  and  an unnamed local Mexican crafts person (available at mc&co). They (mc&co) explain, "The  branches are woven together when freshly cut & flexible.The designs  are  based  on  local  topographical  regions,   serving   as   'maps'.
.Subscribe.Subscribe
"I  think  the  branch  maps  are  lovely  (if  pricey!),  but I  do think it a  bit odd that they do not  mention  the  Polynesian tradition of  making  maps of branches.  To  navigate  and  explore a world of Pacific ocean, sparsely dotted with thousands of  small islands,  Polynesians  created maps  with knots,  shells  and  bamboo  or coconut  fronds to identify routes to  islands. They used the sun and stars to identify cardinal directions, and cues such as wave swells, winds, flights of birds, tides, reefs, cloud formation and flotsam to allow them to travel  thousands of  kilometers  in  canoes,   long   before  Captain   Cooke  and  other   European  explorers   were   able  to explore  the  Pacific.  They  marked  these  cues  on  their  maps  called Rebbelibs,  Medos  and  Mattangs,  or  Stick  Charts. (You can  find  more on the  history of  navigation  at sea,  including Polynesian and Micronesian methods and  maps curtesy of  NOAA, the  US  National Oceanographic  and  Atmospheric   Administration   or    about    stick    charts    here   and   here).
.Subscribe.Subscribe
I suppose it's possible they are less interested in maps, charts, navigation and the history of science and exploration than I (frankly, it's a bit of an obsession) and they may have actually produced their topographic branch maps in ignorance of Polynesian stick charts through a sort of convergent evolutionof design (an idea which in itself interests me). Though, the lovely "Decorative Wall Hangings" might not be a case of cultural appropriation at all, I would far rather have a  useful  piece  of   naviation  history  if  I  had  the