The van der Grinten projection is a compromise
map projection, which means that it is neither
equal-area nor
conformal. Unlike perspective projections, the van der Grinten projection is an arbitrary geometric construction on the plane. Van der Grinten projects the entire Earth into a circle. It largely preserves the familiar shapes of the
Mercator projection while modestly reducing Mercator's distortion. Polar regions are subject to extreme distortion. Lines of longitude converge to points at the poles.[1]
History
Alphons J. van der Grinten invented the projection in 1898 and received US patent #751,226 for it and three others in 1904.[2] The
National Geographic Society adopted the projection for their reference maps of the world in 1922, raising its visibility and stimulating its adoption elsewhere. In 1988, National Geographic replaced the van der Grinten projection with the
Robinson projection.[1]
Geometric construction
The geometric construction given by van der Grinten can be written algebraically:[3]
where x takes the sign of λ − λ0, y takes the sign of φ, and
If φ = 0, then
Similarly, if λ = λ0 or φ = ±π/2, then
In all cases, φ is the
latitude, λ is the
longitude, and λ0 is the central meridian of the projection.
Van der Grinten IV projection
The van der Grinten IV projection is a later polyconic map projection developed by Alphons J. van der Grinten.
The central meridian and equator are straight lines. All other meridians and parallels are arcs of circles.[4][5][6]