Erwin Raisz

Erwin Josephus Raisz
Born (1893-03-01)1 March 1893
Lőcse, Hungary
Died 1 December 1968(1968-12-01) (aged 75)
Bangkok, Thailand
Alma mater Columbia University (M.A.), (PhD)
Known for artful and insightful cartography
Scientific career
Fields cartography, geography, geology
Institutions Institute of Geographical Exploration at Harvard University
China and Central Asia 1941
Olympic Peninsula and Puget Sound 1941
Armadillo Projection

Erwin Raisz (1 March 1893, Lőcse, Hungary – 1 December 1968, Bangkok, Thailand) was a Hungarian-born American cartographer, best known for his physiographic maps of landforms.

Biography

Born in Lőcse, Hungary (now part of Slovakia) in 1893, Raisz was the son of a civil engineer, who introduced him to maps through his work. The son received his degree in civil engineering and architecture from the Royal Polytechnicum in Budapest in 1914, and after serving in the army during World War I, he immigrated to New York in 1923. He worked for the Ohman Map Company while studying for his 1929 Ph.D. at Columbia University. He offered a course in cartography while a student, one of the first such in the United States.[1]

In 1931 he joined the Institute of Geographical Exploration at Harvard University, where he taught cartography and was curator of the map collection for 20 years. He created a significant body of work using hand-drawn pen-and-ink techniques, which during that period were largely being replaced by photo-mechanical processes and scribing. Because they were hand-drawn, his maps and graphics have a distinctive look to them, unique to his hand.

He was author of the first cartography textbook in English, General cartography (1938).

Raisz is best known for his physiographic maps, which describe landforms using his "orthoapsidal" or "armadillo" projection (essentially a small-scale variation on an isometric projection).[2] Created for continents, nations and states, they form a solid corpus of work whose use continues today. Raisz Landform Maps, operated by his family, continues to publish much of his work.

Sources

  • Biography of Raisz on the Raisz Landform Maps web site.
  • Designerati: Cartographers - Erwin Raisz
  • Robinson, Arthur H. (March 1970). "Erwin Josephus Raisz, 1893–1968". Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 60 (1): 189–93. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8306.1970.tb00712.x. ISSN 0004-5608.

Bibliography

  • Raisz, Erwin Josephus (1938), General cartography, McGraw-Hill Series in Geography, New York; London .
  • Raisz, Erwin Josephus (1948). General cartography. McGraw-Hill Series in Geography (2d ed.). New York.

References

  1. Nuñez, José (13–17 June 2016). The First Physiographic Map made by Erwin Raisz (PDF). 6th International Conference on Cartography and GIS. pp. 136–144. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
  2. Raisz, Erwin J. (1962). Principles of Cartography. New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 181.
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