A Picture is worth a Thousand Words! (1 Viewer)

Rami

The Linuxologist
Dec 24, 2004
8,065
#1
How the world really shapes up

by VICTORIA MOORE - More by this author » Last updated at 10:12am on 1st March 2007
Comments (11)

We all know what the world looks like. But a new series of extraordinary maps shows our planet in a very different light.
Rather than defining each country by size, these computer-generated modified maps - or cartograms - redraw the globe with each country's size proportionate to its strengths, or weaknesses, in a whole series of categories.
For instance, when it comes to military spending, the U.S. appears bloated, but Africa is huge when HIV prevalence is mapped.
The cartograms were produced in a unique collaboration between the universities of Michigan in the U.S. and Sheffield. Here are images and more details on some of the most fascinating...
Alcohol Consumption (2001)

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The average Western European drinks over a third more alcohol than the average person in any other area on earth. In some places there is practically no alcohol consumption, which is why many Middle Eastern countries are not visible on this map.
Ugandans drink the most alcohol per adult, closely followed by Luxembourg, the Czech Republic and Ireland.
The map shows the proportion of worldwide alcohol drunk in 2001. It does not take population density into account, so some countries, such as Australia, are unexpectedly shrivelled, while Britain is particularly bloated even though we not in the top ten.

HIV Prevalence
The map shows the distribution of all people aged 15-49 with HIV. In 2003, the highest HIV prevalence was in Swaziland, where almost four in every ten people, were HIV positive. All ten territories with the highest prevalence of HIV are in central and southeastern Africa.

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House Prices
The most expensive housing stock per person in the world is in Europe, the cheapest in the African regions and Southern Asia - despite taking into account that money goes further in these territories. Britain, with its non-stop housing boom, looks disproportionately large.

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Military Spending
Aa the world's biggest military spender in 2002, the U.S. appears hugely bloated in this map, taking up 45 per cent of the world's land mass. It spent $353 billion on arms, out of a world total of $789 billion.
While America spent the money, it reaped hardly any of the consequences - the U.S. shrinks to almost nothing in the map of war deaths on the right...

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War and death
In 2002, there were an estimated 172,000 war deaths worldwide, across 80 territories. The Democratic Republic of Congo (dark red) bore the brunt - 26 per cent - of the total figure.
Nine territories accounted for 70 per cent of all deaths. Burundi had the highest death rate owing to war at 1.2 people per thousand of the population.




Toy Imports
The following two maps demonstrate the passage of the world's toys from east to west. The U.S. (blue) is the world's biggest net importer of toys, followed by the UK and Europe (red). The lowest importer of toys is Africa (orange).

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Toy Exports
As the world's biggest net exporter of toys, China appears on the map like a vivid green giant, attached to the paler green Hong Kong, the second largest net exporter. Britain's once-great toy export industry has all but disappeared.

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Wealth of Nations (1500)
The big difference between 1500 and 2002 (next map) is that all that time ago, the vast bulk of the world's wealth was contained in European and Asian countries. Measured by Gross Domestic Product per person, the wealthiest regions were Eastern and Southern Asia.

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Wealth of Nations (2002)
Today, 500 years on, the money has all moved west: 46 per cent of the wealth is in North America and Western Europe. Along with Japan, these are the regions with the most purchasing power per person, while the people with the lowest purchasing power are to be found in Africa.

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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/li...ews.html?in_article_id=439315&in_page_id=1811
 

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Bozi

The Bozman
Administrator
Oct 18, 2005
22,747
#4
the most surprising to me were war n death, HIV, toy imports/exports, and i had learned about India's wealth back in time in school. shows how the british sucked us dry! :(
aye they really paris hiltoned you:oops:

though at least we abolished our class system
 
Apr 15, 2006
56,640
#6
aye they really paris hiltoned you:oops:

though at least we abolished our class system
:rofl: good one! :)

class system as in caste's n stuff? then yea... we still suck at that! it's bad cos the fuggin politicians still support the lower caste system just for votes! wonder how many generations it'll take for our govt. to be "cleansed"!
 

Bozi

The Bozman
Administrator
Oct 18, 2005
22,747
#7
:rofl: good one! :)

class system as in caste's n stuff? then yea... we still suck at that! it's bad cos the fuggin politicians still support the lower caste system just for votes! wonder how many generations it'll take for our govt. to be "cleansed"!
aye i was pissing about, the class system in braitain is still there, its just slyly hidden away.well obviously except for the "ornamental" royal family

its more an invisible barrier that prevents you from ever entering like in america, they have a class system without a name

uh-oh can of worms
 
Apr 15, 2006
56,640
#8
aye i was pissing about, the class system in braitain is still there, its just slyly hidden away.well obviously except for the "ornamental" royal family

its more an invisible barrier that prevents you from ever entering like in america, they have a class system without a name

uh-oh can of worms
class system in britain??? wtf??? who???
 

Bozi

The Bozman
Administrator
Oct 18, 2005
22,747
#11
aye i was pissing about, the class system in braitain is still there, its just slyly hidden away.well obviously except for the "ornamental" royal family

its more an invisible barrier that prevents you from ever entering like in america, they have a class system without a name

uh-oh can of worms
a glass ceiling of sorts, prevents you from ever entering the upper echilons of high-society
 

Red

-------
Moderator
Nov 26, 2006
47,024
#17
:agree: the most agonising thing is watching talentless "socialites" get recording contracts,tv shows and magazine collumns simply because of who they are:tdown:
Quit whinging you peasant. :D

Its not what you know, its who you know.
 

Red

-------
Moderator
Nov 26, 2006
47,024
#20
hey man just pointing out the flaws in the system when talentless hags like lilly allen, paris hilton,etc... are better known than folk with real talent
I know what you mean. Has always been the case and always will be, unfortunately.
 

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