An image of the polar region mapped onto a sphere might help (globe in lower left and zoomed-in on main part):
Untitled-1.jpg
I added an extra magenta grid to make it clear where the pole converges.
No, what I'm saying is that it is impossible to have a specific point in space that is made of 2 different things. It can be land or water but not both.
On the map here, the contibental shelf suggest that the ocean extends beyond the north pole. But it is impossible.
My Deviantart: https://vincent--l.deviantart.com/
He's saying that an Equirectangular projection of a sphere transforms the singular points at the poles into lines on the Equirectangular projection that go all of the way across the top or bottom of the image. Because it's a single physical point on the world being logically transformed into a line on the map, the value of that point should be shown all of the way across that line. That is, the line across the top of the Equirectangular map should have the same value. In this case, the topmost line has two different values, with those areas showing up as a spiky squeezed area on the reprojected map that I attached in my previous post.
For practical maps (that is, finite resolution raster maps), it's possible to have both land and water across a single scan line at the top and bottom, but they have to be very carefully drawn to avoid polar pinching. The attached map shows an Equirectangular map of the world with some polar islands where the coast is right at the poles and what those poles would look like on a sphere (Orthographic projection).
aa1.jpg
Last edited by waldronate; 03-16-2019 at 06:34 PM.
Ah ok I thought that he meant that phisically a continent is required on poles.
Phew, that is very good to know. My brain likes to get wound up about plausibility :p.
That explains the problem I was having with orthographic projections! I fiddled a bit but didn't realize what the issue was. Adjusted to make it land.
Okay, attempt 2, trying to mesh both maps and pull away from the currents a little. Not onfident about the equatorial island chain, I feel like everything gets muddled in there.
Oni currents take 2.png
There are still currents under the icecap, unless there is a landmass as well.
My Deviantart: https://vincent--l.deviantart.com/
Okay, another take. Added land at the top, fixed the currents to go back under the ice, and adjusted the center land after deciding on it for my story's setting. There are some gaps where I wasn't sure of myself, and I still think those islands are messy, but is this plausible enough to start figuring out climates? Or have I committed more current crimes?
USE THIS WORLD NOW.png
I recommend a quick bit of research on "thermohaline circulation" and the Gulf Stream. The warmer equatorial waters on the left-hand side of the ocean might well drive straight up into the ice cap, pushing back the ice and making the pole a bit warmer than expected. As an example of the moderating effects of the ocean in general and a warm current in particular, Edinburgh is slightly north of Moscow, but it's a bit less icy in winter.