What counts as a "use" for a world map?
Actual world map pages in an atlas, designed to give an accurate, informative overview of the world? World map posters, designed to look cool on a wall more than anything? Maps in news stories and scientific papers, meant to illustrate some particular dataset rather than just the world itself? Video game boards, where the map is part of the gameplay rather than a static non-interactive setpiece? World maps on map projection list sites, which serve simply to give an example of what every given map projection looks like?
If you're counting all of them, and going strictly by a "number of publications" count regardless of viewership, then I think the news stories and scientific papers would probably dominate, because those are frequent short publications that will always have new reasons to keep grabbing maps to put in their articles, even if they're mostly lazy and unimaginative and keep using the same ones.
PeteD wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2023 6:03 am- Mercator
- cylindrical equal-area
- other cylindrical projections that lie somewhere between the Mercator and the equirectangular – there are several that all look very similar
By "between", and listing Mercator separately and explicitly, are you implying that you do not consider the equirectangular projection itself a common projection?
Because I do think it's a pretty common choice when people don't want to think about it too hard and are just in a rush to pick something quick and easy to use, especially when people want a rectangular map (whether for aesthetic reasons or because they actually need the cylindrical wraparound effect).
I'm under the impression equirectangular projections are more common than the cylindrical equal-area projections, really. People who understand (and care about) cartography well enough to see the value of an equal-area projection usually also realize the limitations of sticking to cylindrical ones. I don't think I've seen cylindrical equal-area projections much outside the context of cartography discussions about equal-area projections. Equirectangular projections appeal to people looking to make a simple, natural-looking compromise projection rather than optimizing any one variable.
daan wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2023 6:44 amI might add Mollweide to the list, which appears frequently in many scientific domains.
PeteD wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2023 8:16 pmOK, another one to add to the list. I know it's often used for mapping the celestial sphere, including images of the cosmic microwave background, but didn't realize it was widely used in science in general.
Atarimaster wrote: ↑Wed Aug 23, 2023 3:46 amThere seems to be a law saying that maps showing continental drift have to use a projection that shows the world in an ellipse…

So sometimes it is Mollweide, sometimes Hammer, and sometimes it’s hard to tell because there are no graticule lines and today's state is missing.
Equal-area projections in general are favored in statistics, particularly when mapping thing-per-area metrics like population density. Mollweide also seems to be the norm in meteorology/climatology and such. I've seen at least one case of an article using Mollweide, apparently as a scientific-community-accepted "default" map projection, in the one context that I really
wouldn't recommend its use for: a climate simulation of weather on a tidally-locked planet, where, of course, the effect of latitude relative to the equator is far less dominant than on normal planets!
Atarimaster wrote: ↑Wed Aug 23, 2023 3:46 amI’d add Goode homolosine to your list – I don’t think that it is used very often, but IF there’s an “interrupted” world map, it’s always this one.
That is a map that I've rarely seen outside of "you can do this, isn't it cool?" demonstrations of different world map projections. The fact that interruptions help to lower distortion is illustrative and helps to enlighten people on the basic tradeoffs that go into cartography, but has anyone ever used it outside of the context of talking about map projections?
On the other hand, it almost always shows up in layman-oriented galleries of different world map projections, even relatively small ones that don't have room for dozens of options.