Just out of curiosity (maybe this as already been mentioned already)
what is your sea/land proportion?
Thanks for the feed back guy's, I'll come back later and address each comment separately I really have to run or I'll be late to pick up my son from school but I started working on some islands today, added my "Australia like" continent and the south pole so just a quick update on my progress for the day.
The Whole Damn World.jpg
Just out of curiosity (maybe this as already been mentioned already)
what is your sea/land proportion?
Thanks Warlin I really haden't considered that some plates could move faster then others, actually... stupid me I was trying to get them all the same speed and failing miserably ... This actually helps allot.
Thanks Chashio... My brain doesn't really want to make sense of it either.
That's actually a really good idea PaGaN, too bad I didn't think of it earlier I'll have to give that a try.
No worries Azelor I wasn't insulted either way.
As ever, Kacey, a great update to the landforms. I really am excited to see this world evolve.
Hopefully i should be able to do some work on my world tonight and be able to show you what i mean visually.
progress is progress!
PaGaN
THERE IS ALWAYS MORE THAN ONE RIGHT ANSWER!
You would need to convert the projection to an equal area projection. Get rid of the dotted line and other stuff hiding the map first so you don't select them.I have absolutely no idea, I wouldn't even know how to find that out. here?
Using the magic wand, you compare the land pixels with the overall pixels on the map. That gives you a percentage.
Furthermore, if you want to know how big one continent is in sq km, you take the % and multiply it by the total area of the map.
If that sounds too complicated I could do it for you. I just need a clean copy just with land and water.
You have large landmasses close to the poles. These tend to be oversized when using a cylindrical projection compared to reality.Or do you think there is too much land
Overall, it's hard to tell. Just by looking at it. You might have more land than Earth but not that much.
On the world scale, I don't know. It could affect the planet's albedo since oceans retain more heat from the star than the forests, I think.What type of an impact could sea/land proportion have on a planet? Could it effect the climate?
But oceans can generate a lot of clouds from evaporation, which reduces the albedo.
The placement of the landmasses could play a larger role. Several millions of years ago, when the strait of Magellan was closed, the climate of Antarctica was much warmer. Warm waters from the Atlantic influenced the local climate.
Now the continent is completely cut off, surrounded by a could circumpolar current, a very strong one. It's a good thing since it prevent the ice from melting too fast.
Also, the climate in Antarctica was warmer because the atmospheric composition of the planet was different. The greenhouse effect was much stronger then leading to more uniform climates planet-wide.
Back to your map, the impact globally is hard to estimate, or probably small. On the local level, large landmasses produce monsoons.
That definitely sounds too complicated...Will this do?
The Whole Damn World.jpg
Keep in mind that this coast is still very much a work in progress, I made some major changes just tonight but the basic distribution is pretty much set in stone. I still have a few areas that need some major changes but not enough to impact the size by much. This is still a sketch, when I'm finally happy with the forms I'll then work on the actual coast line and clean things up.
I really appreciate the help, I can't thank you enough.
Here's the poles...
poles.jpg
I'm pretty happy with the South pole, but the North pole definitely still needs some work.
And here's a better view of the oceans on a Robinson projection, it's a little easier to see areas that need fixing this way, and there are lots of areas that need fixing...
oceans.jpg
Ooooooh, pretty! You're going to have so many places to explore here Kacey. I love it.
What's wrong with the oceans? They look fine, better then fine. She with the poles. One thing about the North Pole would be that, given the small sea area, I would suspect that the whole thing would be covered by ice cap (unless your overall planetary climate is warmer than earth today).
THERE IS ALWAYS MORE THAN ONE RIGHT ANSWER!
kacey, you got the whole community (maybe nothe whole lot, but a big bunch!) cheering for this
I'm struggling to find some free time and scribble up notes on your maps, because I got quite a few things to tell you. Will come up with something (pretty awesome, I mean, to me..) soon, hang in there!