NAME
psbasemap - To plot PostScript basemaps
SYNOPSIS
psbasemap -Btickinfo -Jparameters -Rwest/east/south/north[r] [ -Eaz-
imuth/elevation ] [ -Gfill ] [ -K ] [
-L[f][x]lon0/lat0[/slon]/slat/length[m|n|k][:label:just][+ppen][+ffill]
] [ -O ] [ -P ] [ -U[/dx/dy/][label] ] [
-T[f|m][x]lon0/lat0/size[/info][:w,e,s,n:][+gint[/mint]] ] [ -V ] [
-Xx-shift ] [ -Yy-shift ] [ -Xy-level ] [ -Zzlevel ] [ -ccopies ]
DESCRIPTION
psbasemap creates PostScript code that will produce a basemap. Several
map projections are available, and the user may specify separate tick-
mark intervals for boundary annotation, ticking, and [optionally] grid-
lines. A simple map scale or directional rose may also be plotted.
No space between the option flag and the associated arguments.
Use upper case for the option flags and lower case for modifiers.
-B Sets map boundary annotation and tickmark intervals. The format
of tickinfo is
[p|s]xinfo[/yinfo[/zinfo]][:."Title":][W|w][E|e][S|s][N|n][Z|z[+]].
The leading p [Default] or s selects the primary or secondary
annotation information. Each of the ?info segments are
textstrings of the form info[:"Axis label":][:="pre-
fix":][:,"unit label":]. The info string is made up of one or
more concatenated substrings of the form
[which]stride[+-phase][u]. The optional which can be either a
for annotation tick spacing [Default], f for frame tick spacing,
and g for gridline spacing. If frame interval is not set, it is
assumed to be the same as annotation interval. stride is the
desired stride interval. The optional phase shifts the annota-
tion interval by that amount. The optional u indicates the unit
of the stride and can be any of Y (year, plot with 4 digits), y
(year, plot with 2 digits), O (month, plot using PLOT_DATE_FOR-
MAT), o (month, plot with 2 digits), U (ISO week, plot using
PLOT_DATE_FORMAT), u (ISO week, plot using 2 digits), r (Grego-
rian week, 7-day stride from start of week TIME_WEEK_START), K
(ISO weekday, plot name of day), D (date, plot using
PLOT_DATE_FORMAT), d (day, plot day of month 0-31 or year 1-366,
via PLOT_DATE_FORMAT), R (day, same as d, aligned with
TIME_WEEK_START), H (hour, plot using PLOT_CLOCK_FORMAT), h
(hour, plot with 2 digits), M (minute, plot using
PLOT_CLOCK_FORMAT), m (minute, plot with 2 digits), C (second,
plot using PLOT_CLOCK_FORMAT), c (second, plot with 2 digits).
Note for geographic axes m and c instead mean arc minutes and
arc seconds. All entities that are language-specific are under
control by TIME_LANGUAGE. To specify separate x and y ticks,
separate the substrings that apply to the x and y axes with a
slash [/] (If a 3-D basemap is selected with -E and -Jz, a third
substring pertaining to the vertical axis may be appended.) For
linear/log/power projections (-Jx|X): Labels for each axis can
be added by surrounding them with colons. If the first character
in the label is a period, then the label is used as plot title;
if it is a comma then the label is appended to each annotation;
if it is an equal sign (=) the the prefix is prepended to each
annotation (start label/prefix with - to avoid space between
annotation and item); else it is the axis label. If the label
consists of more than one word, enclose the entire label in dou-
ble quotes (e.g., :"my label":).
By default, all 4 boundaries are plotted (referred to as W, E,
S, N). To change the default, append the code for only those
axes you want (e.g., WS for standard lower-left x- and y-axis
system). Upper case (e.g., W) means draw axis/tickmarks AND
annotate it, whereas lower case (e.g., w) will only draw
axis/tickmarks. (If a 3-D basemap is selected with -E and -Jz,
append Z or z to control the appearance of the vertical axis.
Append ’+’ to draw the outline of the cube defined by -R. Note
that for 3-D views the title, if given, will be suppressed.)
For non-geographical projections: Give negative scale (in -Jx)
or axis length (in -JX) to change the direction of increasing
coordinates (i.e., to make the y-axis positive down). For log10
axes: Annotations can be specified in one of three ways: (1)
stride can be 1, 2, or 3. Annotations will then occur at 1,
1-2-5, or 1-2-3-4-...-9, respectively. This option can also be
used for the frame and grid intervals. (2) An l is appended to
the tickinfo string. Then, log10 of the tick value is plotted
at every integer log10 value. (3) A p is appended to the tick-
info string. Then, annotations appear as 10 raised to log10 of
the tick value. For power axes: Annotations can be specified in
one of two ways: (1) stride sets the regular annotation inter-
val. (2) A p is appended to the tickinfo string. Then, the anno-
tation interval is expected to be in transformed units, but the
annotation value will be plotted as untransformed units. E.g.,
if stride = 1 and power = 0.5 (i.e., sqrt), then equidistant
annotations labeled 1-4-9... will appear.
These GMT parameters can affect the appearance of the map bound-
ary: ANNOT_MIN_ANGLE, ANNOT_MIN_SPACING, ANNOT_FONT_PRIMARY,
ANNOT_FONT_SECONDARY, ANNOT_FONT_SIZE_PRIMARY,
ANNOT_FONT_SIZE_SECONDARY, ANNOT_OFFSET_PRIMARY, ANNOT_OFF-
SET_SECONDARY, BASEMAP_AXES, BASEMAP_FRAME_RGB, BASEMAP_TYPE,
DEGREE_FORMAT, FRAME_PEN, FRAME_WIDTH, GRID_CROSS_SIZE_PRIMARY,
GRID_PEN_PRIMARY, GRID_CROSS_SIZE_SECONDARY, GRID_PEN_SECONDARY,
HEADER_FON, HEADER_FONT_SIZE, LABEL_FONT, LABEL_FONT_SIZE,
LINE_STEP, OBLIQUE_ANNOTATION, PLOT_CLOCK_FOMAT, PLOT_DATE_FOR-
MAT, TIME_FORMAT_PRIMARY, TIME_FORMAT_SECONDARY, TIME_LANGUAGE,
TIME_WEEK_START, TICK_LENGTH, TICK_PEN, and Y_AXIS_TYPE; see the
gmtdefaults man page for details.
-J Selects the map projection. The following character determines
the projection. If the character is upper case then the argu-
ment(s) supplied as scale(s) is interpreted to be the map width
(or axis lengths), else the scale argument(s) is the map scale
(see its definition for each projection). UNIT is cm, inch, or
m, depending on the MEASURE_UNIT setting in .gmtdefaults4, but
this can be overridden on the command line by appending c, i, or
m to the scale/width values. Append h, +, or - to the given
width if you instead want to set map height, the maximum dimen-
sion, or the minimum dimension, respectively [Default is w for
width]. Choose one of the following projections (The E or C
after projection names stands for Equal-Area and Conformal,
respectively):
CYLINDRICAL PROJECTIONS:
-Jclon0/lat0/scale or -JClon0/lat0/width (Cassini).
Give projection center and scale (1:xxxx or
UNIT/degree).
-Jjlon0/scale or -JJlon0/width (Miller Cylindrical Projection).
Give the central meridian and scale (1:xxxx or
UNIT/degree).
-Jmparameters (Mercator [C]). Specify one of:
-Jmscale or -JMwidth
Give scale along equator (1:xxxx or
UNIT/degree).
-Jmlon0/lat0/scale or -JMlon0/lat0/width
Give central meridian, standard latitude and
scale along parallel (1:xxxx or UNIT/degree).
-Joparameters (Oblique Mercator [C]). Specify one of:
-Joalon0/lat0/azimuth/scale or
-JOalon0/lat0/azimuth/width
Set projection center, azimuth of oblique equa-
tor, and scale.
-Joblon0/lat0/lon1/lat1/scale or
-JOblon0/lat0/lon1/lat1/scale
Set projection center, another point on the
oblique equator, and scale.
-Joclon0/lat0/lonp/latp/scale or
-JOclon0/lat0/lonp/latp/scale
Set projection center, pole of oblique projec-
tion, and scale.
Give scale along oblique equator (1:xxxx or
UNIT/degree).
-Jqlon0/scale or -JQlon0/width (Equidistant Cylindrical Projec-
tion (Plate Carree)).
Give the central meridian and scale (1:xxxx or
UNIT/degree).
-Jtparameters (Transverse Mercator [C]). Specify one of:
-Jtlon0/scale or -JTlon0/width
Give the central meridian and scale (1:xxxx or
UNIT/degree).
-Jtlon0/lat0/scale or -JTlon0/lat0/width
Give projection center and scale (1:xxxx or
UNIT/degree).
-Juzone/scale or -JUzone/width (UTM - Universal Transverse Mer-
cator [C]).
Give the zone number (1-60) and scale (1:xxxx or
UNIT/degree).
zones: prepend - or + to enforce southern or northern
hemisphere conventions [northern if south > 0].
-Jylon0/lats/scale or -JYlon0/lats/width (Basic Cylindrical Pro-
jections [E]).
Give the central meridian, standard parallel, and scale
(1:xxxx or UNIT/degree).
The standard parallel is typically one of these (but can
be any value):
45 - The Peters projection
37.4 - The Trystan Edwards projection
30 - The Behrman projection
0 - The Lambert projection
AZIMUTHAL PROJECTIONS:
[Except for polar aspects, -Rw/e/s/n will be reset to -Rg. Use
-R<...>r for smaller regions]
-Jalon0/lat0/scale or -JAlon0/lat0/width (Lambert [E]).
lon0/lat0 specifies the projection center.
Give scale as 1:xxxx or radius/lat, where radius is dis-
tance
in UNIT from origin to the oblique latitude lat.
-Jelon0/lat0/scale or -JElon0/lat0/width (Equidistant).
lon0/lat0 specifies the projection center.
Give scale as 1:xxxx or radius/lat, where radius is dis-
tance
in UNIT from origin to the oblique latitude lat.
-Jflon0/lat0/horizon/scale or -JFlon0/lat0/horizon/width
(Gnomonic).
lon0/lat0 specifies the projection center.
horizon specifies the max distance from projection cen-
ter (in degrees, < 90).
Give scale as 1:xxxx or radius/lat, where radius is dis-
tance
in UNIT from origin to the oblique latitude lat.
-Jglon0/lat0/scale or -JGlon0/lat0/width (Orthographic).
lon0/lat0 specifies the projection center.
Give scale as 1:xxxx or radius/lat, where radius is dis-
tance
in UNIT from origin to the oblique latitude lat.
-Jslon0/lat0/scale or -JSlon0/lat0/width (General Stereographic
[C]).
lon0/lat0 specifies the projection center.
Give scale as 1:xxxx (true at pole) or slat/1:xxxx (true
at standard parallel slat)
or radius/lat (radius in UNIT from origin to the oblique
latitude lat).
CONIC PROJECTIONS:
-Jblon0/lat0/lat1/lat2/scale or -JBlon0/lat0/lat1/lat2/width
(Albers [E]).
Give projection center, two standard parallels, and
scale (1:xxxx or UNIT/degree).
-Jdlon0/lat0/lat1/lat2/scale or -JDlon0/lat0/lat1/lat2/width
(Equidistant)
Give projection center, two standard parallels, and
scale (1:xxxx or UNIT/degree).
-Jllon0/lat0/lat1/lat2/scale or -JLlon0/lat0/lat1/lat2/width
(Lambert [C])
Give origin, 2 standard parallels, and scale along these
(1:xxxx or UNIT/degree).
MISCELLANEOUS PROJECTIONS:
-Jhlon0/scale or -JHlon0/width (Hammer [E]).
Give the central meridian and scale along equator
(1:xxxx or UNIT/degree).
-Jilon0/scale or -JIlon0/width (Sinusoidal [E]).
Give the central meridian and scale along equator
(1:xxxx or UNIT/degree).
-Jk[f|s]lon0/scale or -JK[f|s]lon0/width (Eckert IV (f) and VI
(s) [E]).
Give the central meridian and scale along equator
(1:xxxx or UNIT/degree).
-Jnlon0/scale or -JNlon0/width (Robinson).
Give the central meridian and scale along equator
(1:xxxx or UNIT/degree).
-Jrlon0/scale -JRlon0/width (Winkel Tripel).
Give the central meridian and scale along equator
(1:xxxx or UNIT/degree).
-Jvlon0/scale or -JVlon0/width (Van der Grinten).
Give the central meridian and scale along equator
(1:xxxx or UNIT/degree).
-Jwlon0/scale or -JWlon0/width (Mollweide [E]).
Give the central meridian and scale along equator
(1:xxxx or UNIT/degree).
NON-GEOGRAPHICAL PROJECTIONS:
-Jp[a]scale[/origin] or -JP[a]width[/origin] (Linear projection
for polar (theta,r) coordinates, optionally insert a after -Jp [
or -JP] for azimuths CW from North instead of directions CCW
from East [default], optionally append /origin in degrees to
indicate an angular offset [0]).
Give scale in UNIT/r-unit.
-Jxx-scale[/y-scale] or -JXwidth[/height]
scale [or width] can be any of the following 3 types:
-Jxscale - Regular linear scaling.
-Jxscalel - Take log10 of values before scaling.
-Jxscaleppower - Raise values to power before scaling.
-JxscaleT|t - Time axis. T indicates input coordinates
are absolute time while t means they are time relative
to TIME_EPOCH.
Give x-scale in UNIT/x-unit and y-scale in UNIT/y-unit. (y-
scale = x-scale if not specified separately). Use negative
scale(s) to reverse the direction of an axis (e.g., to have y be
positive down).
Append a single d if data are geographical coordinates in
degrees. Default axis lengths (see gmtdefaults) can be invoked
using -JXh (for landscape); -JXv (for portrait) will swap the x-
and y-axis lengths. The GMT default unit for this installation
is UNIT. However, you may change this by editing your .gmtde-
faults4 file(s) (run gmtdefaults to create one if you don’t have
it).’
The ellipsoid used in the map projections is user-defin-
able by editing the .gmtdefaults4 file in your home directory.
63 commonly used ellipsoids and a spheroid are currently sup-
ported, and users may also specify their own ellipsoid parame-
ters (see man gmtdefaults for more details). GMT default is
WGS-84. Several GMT parameters can affect the projection: ELLIP-
SOID, INTERPOLANT, MAP_SCALE_FACTOR, and MEASURE_UNIT; see the
gmtdefaults man page for details.
-R xmin, xmax, ymin, and ymax specify the Region of interest. For
geographic regions, these limits correspond to west, east,
south, and north and you may specify them in decimal degrees or
in [+-]dd:mm[:ss.xxx][W|E|S|N] format. Append r if lower left
and upper right map coordinates are given instead of wesn. The
two shorthands -Rg -Rd stand for global domain (0/360 or
-180/+180 in longitude respectively, with -90/+90 in latitude).
For calendar time coordinates you may either give relative time
(relative to the selected TIME_EPOCH and in the selected
TIME_UNIT; append t to -JX|x), or absolute time of the form
[date]T[clock] (append T to -JX|x). At least one of date and
clock must be present; the T is always required. The date string
must be of the form [-]yyyy[-mm[-dd]] (Gregorian calendar) or
yyyy[-Www[-d]] (ISO week calendar), while the clock string must
be of the form hh:mm:ss[.xxx]. The use of delimiters and their
type and positions must be as indicated (however, input/output
and plotting formats are flexible).
OPTIONS
-E Sets the viewpoint’s azimuth and elevation (for perspective
view) [180/90].
-G Paint inside of basemap. [Default is no fill]. Specify the
shade (0-255) or color (r/g/b, each in 0-255, h/s/v, with h in
0-360, s, and v in 0-1, and set COLOR_MODEL = hsv, or c/m/y/k,
each in 0-100 %).
-Jz Sets the vertical scaling (for 3-D maps). Same syntax as -Jx.
-K More PostScript code will be appended later [Default terminates
the plot system].
-L Draws a simple map scale centered on lon0/lat0. Use -Lx to spec-
ify x/y position instead. Scale is calculated at latitude slat
(optionally supply longitude slon for oblique projections
[Default is central meridian]), length is in km [miles if m is
appended; nautical miles if n is appended]. Use -Lf to get a
"fancy" scale [Default is plain]. The default label equals the
distance unit (km, miles, nautical miles) and is justified on
top of the scale [t]. Change this by giving your own label (or -
to keep the default) and justification (l(eft), r(ight), t(op),
b(ottom), and u(unit) - using the label as a unit appended to
all distance annotations along the scale). If you want to place
a rectangle behind the scale, specify pen and/or fill parameters
with the +p and +f modifiers.
-O Selects Overlay plot mode [Default initializes a new plot sys-
tem].
-P Selects Portrait plotting mode [GMT Default is Landscape, see
gmtdefaults to change this].
-T Draws a simple map directional rose centered on lon0/lat0. Use
-Tx to specify x/y position instead. The size is the diameter
of the rose, and optional label information can be specified to
override the default values of W, E, S, and N (Give :: to sup-
press all labels). The default [plain] map rose only labels
north. Use -Tf to get a "fancy" rose, and specify what kind of
rose you want drawn. The default [1] draws the two principal E-
W, N-S orientations, 2 adds the two intermediate NW-SE and NE-SW
orientations, while 3 adds the eight minor orientations WNW-ESE,
NNW-SSE, NNE-SSW, and ENE-WSW. For a magnetic compass rose,
specify -Tm. If given, info must be the two parameters dec/dla-
bel, where dec is the magnetic declination and dlabel is a label
for the magnetic compass needle (specify ’-’ to format a label
from dec). Then, both directions to geographic and magnetic
north are plotted [Default is geographic only]. If the north
label = * then a north star is plotted instead of the north
label. Annotation and two levels of tick intervals for geo-
graphic and magnetic directions are 10/5/1 and 30/5/1 degrees,
respectively; override these settings by appending
+gints[/mints]. Color and pen attributes are taken from
COLOR_BACKGROUND and TICK_PEN, respectively, while label fonts
and sizes follow the usual annotation, label, and header font
settings.
-U Draw Unix System time stamp on plot. User may specify where the
lower left corner of the stamp should fall on the page relative
to lower left corner of plot. Optionally, append a label, or c
(which will plot the command string.). The GMT parameters
UNIX_TIME and UNIX_TIME_POS can affect the appearance; see the
gmtdefaults man page for details.
-V Selects verbose mode, which will send progress reports to stderr
[Default runs "silently"].
-X -Y Shift origin of plot by (x-shift,y-shift). Prepend a for abso-
lute coordinates; the default (r) will reset plot origin. Give
c to center plot using current page size.
-Z For 3-D projections: Sets the z-level of the basemap [0].
-c Specifies the number of plot copies. [Default is 1].
EXAMPLES
The following section illustrates the use of the options by giving some
examples for the available map projections. Note how scales may be
given in several different ways depending on the projection. Also note
the use of upper case letters to specify map width instead of map
scale.
NON-GEOGRAPHICAL PROJECTIONS
Linear x-y plot
To make a linear x/y frame with all axes, but with only left and bottom
axes annotated, using xscale = yscale = 1.0, ticking every 1 unit and
annotating every 2, and using xlabel = "Distance" and ylabel = "No of
samples", use
psbasemap -R0/9/0/5 -Jx1 -Bf1a2:Distance:/:"No of samples":WeSn > lin-
ear.ps
log-log plot
To make a log-log frame with only the left and bottom axes, where the
x-axis is 25 cm and annotated every 1-2-5 and the y-axis is 15 cm and
annotated every power of 10 but has tickmarks every 0.1, run
psbasemap -R1/10000/1e20/1e25 -JX25cl/15cl -B2:Wave-
length:/a1pf3:Power:WS > loglog.ps
power axes
To design an axis system to be used for a depth-sqrt(age) plot with
depth positive down, ticked and annotated every 500m, and ages anno-
tated at 1 my, 4 my, 9 my etc, use
psbasemap -R0/100/0/5000 -Jx1p0.5/-0.001 -B1p:"Crustal age":/500:Depth:
> power.ps
Polar (theta,r) plot
For a base map for use with polar coordinates, where the radius from 0
to 1000 should correspond to 3 inch and with gridlines and ticks every
30 degrees and 100 units, use
psbasemap -R0/360/0/1000 -JP6i -B30p/100 > polar.ps
CYLINDRICAL MAP PROJECTIONS
Cassini
A 10 -cm-wide basemap using the Cassini projection may be obtained by
psbasemap -R20/50/20/35 -JC35/28/10c -P -B5g5:.Cassini: > cassini.ps
Mercator [conformal]
A Mercator map with scale 0.025 inch/degree along equator, and showing
the length of 5000 km along the equator (centered on 1/1 inch), may be
plotted as
psbasemap -R90/180/-50/50 -Jm0.025i -B30g30:.Mercator: -Lx1i/1i/0/5000
> mercator.ps
Miller
A global Miller cylindrical map with scale 1:200,000,000 may be plotted
as
psbasemap -R0/360/-90/90 -Jj180/1:200000000 -B30g30:.Miller: >
miller.ps
Oblique Mercator [conformal]
To create a page-size global oblique Mercator basemap for a pole at
(90,30) with gridlines every 30 degrees, run
psbasemap -R0/360/-70/70 -Joc0/0/90/30/0.064cd -B30g30:."Oblique Merca-
tor": > oblmerc.ps
Transverse Mercator [conformal]
A regular Transverse Mercator basemap for some region may look like
psbasemap -R69:30/71:45/-17/-15:15 -Jt70/1:1000000 -B15m:."Survey
area": -P > transmerc.ps
Equidistant Cylindrical Projection
This projection only needs the central meridian and scale. A 25 cm wide
global basemap centered on the 130E meridian is made by
psbasemap -R-50/310/-90/90 -JQ130/25c -B30g30:."Equidistant Cylindri-
cal": > cyl_eqdist.ps
Universal Transverse Mercator [conformal]
To use this projection you must know the UTM zone number, which defines
the central meridian. A UTM basemap for Indo-China can be plotted as
psbasemap -R95/5/108/20r -Ju46/1:10000000 -B3g3:.UTM: > utm.ps
Basic Cylindrical [equal-area]
First select which of the cylindrical equal-area projections you want
by deciding on the standard parallel. Here we will use 45 degrees
which gives the Peters projection. A 9 inch wide global basemap cen-
tered on the Pacific is made by
psbasemap -R0/360/-90/90 -JY180/45/9i -B30g30:.Peters: > peters.ps
CONIC MAP PROJECTIONS
Albers [equal-area]
A basemap for middle Europe may be created by
psbasemap -R0/90/25/55 -Jb45/20/32/45/0.25c -B10g10:."Albers Equal-
area": > albers.ps
Lambert [conformal]
Another basemap for middle Europe may be created by
psbasemap -R0/90/25/55 -Jl45/20/32/45/0.1i -B10g10:."Lambert Conformal
Conic": > lambertc.ps
Equidistant
Yet another basemap of width 6 inch for middle Europe may be created by
psbasemap -R0/90/25/55 -JD45/20/32/45/6i -B10g10:."Equidistant conic":
> econic.ps
AZIMUTHAL MAP PROJECTIONS
Lambert [equal-area]
A 15 -cm-wide global view of the world from the vantage point -80/-30
will give the following basemap:
psbasemap -R0/360/-90/90 -JA-80/-30/15c -B30g30/15g15:."Lambert
Azimuthal": > lamberta.ps
Follow the instructions for stereographic projection if you want to
impose rectangular boundaries on the azimuthal equal-area map but sub-
stitute -Ja for -Js.
Equidistant
A 15 -cm-wide global map in which distances from the center (here
125/10) to any point is true can be obtained by:
psbasemap -R0/360/-90/90 -JE125/10/15c -B30g30/15g15:."Equidistant": >
equi.ps
Gnomonic
A view of the world from the vantage point -100/40 out to a horizon of
60 degrees from the center can be made using the Gnomonic projection:
psbasemap -R0/360/-90/90 -JF-100/40/60/6i -B30g30/15g15:."Gnomonic": >
gnomonic.ps
Orthographic
A global perspective (from infinite distance) view of the world from
the vantage point 125/10 will give the following 6 -inch-wide basemap:
psbasemap -R0/360/-90/90 -JG125/10/6i -B30g30/15g15:."Orthographic": >
ortho.ps
Stereographic [conformal]
To make a Polar stereographic projection basemap with radius = 12 cm to
-60 degree latitude, with plot title "Salinity measurements", using 5
degrees annotation/tick interval and 1 degree gridlines, run
psbasemap -R-45/45/-90/-60 -Js0/-90/12c/-60 -B5g5:."Salinity measure-
ments": > stereo1.ps
To make a 12 -cm-wide stereographic basemap for Australia from an arbi-
trary view point (not the poles), and use a rectangular boundary, we
must give the pole for the new projection and use the -R option to
indicate the lower left and upper right corners (in lon/lat) that will
define our rectangle. We choose a pole at 130/-30 and use 100/-45 and
160/-5 as our corners. The command becomes
psbasemap -R100/-45/160/-5r -JS130/-30/12c -B30g30/15g15:."General
Stereographic View": > stereo2.ps
MISCELLANEOUS MAP PROJECTIONS
Hammer [equal-area]
The Hammer projection is mostly used for global maps and thus the
spherical form is used. To get a world map centered on Greenwich at a
scale of 1:200000000, use
psbasemap -R0/360/-90/90 -Jh180/1:200000000 -B30g30/15g15:.Hammer: >
hammer.ps
Sinusoidal [equal-area]
To make a sinusiodal world map centered on Greenwich, with a scale
along the equator of 0.02 inch/degree, use
psbasemap -R-180/180/-90/90 -Ji0/0.02i -B30g30/15g15:."Sinusoidal": >
sinus1.ps
To make an interrupted sinusiodal world map with breaks at 160W, 20W,
and 60E, with a scale along the equator of 0.02 inch/degree, run the
following sequence of commands:
psbasemap -R-160/-20/-90/90 -Ji-90/0.02i -B30g30/15g15Wesn -K >
sinus_i.ps
psbasemap -R-20/60/-90/90 -Ji20/0.02i -B30g30/15g15wesn -O -K -X2.8i >>
sinus_i.ps
psbasemap -R60/200/-90/90 -Ji130/0.02i -B30g30/15g15wEsn -O -X1.6i >>
sinus_i.ps
Eckert IV [equal-area]
Pseudo-cylindrical projection typically used for global maps only. Set
the central longitude and scale, e.g.,
psbasemap -R0/360/-90/90 -Jkf180/0.064c -B30g30/15g15:."Eckert IV": >
eckert4.ps
Eckert VI [equal-area]
Another pseudo-cylindrical projection typically used for global maps
only. Set the central longitude and scale, e.g.,
psbasemap -R0/360/-90/90 -Jks180/0.064c -B30g30/15g15:."Eckert VI": >
eckert6.ps
Robinson
Projection designed to make global maps "look right". Set the central
longitude and width, e.g.,
psbasemap -R-180/180/-90/90 -JN0/8i -B30g30/15g15:."Robinson": > robin-
son.ps
Winkel Tripel
Yet another projection typically used for global maps only. You can set
the central longitude, e.g.,
psbasemap -R90/450/-90/90 -JR270/25c -B30g30/15g15:."Winkel Tripel": >
winkel.ps
Mollweide [equal-area]
The Mollweide projection is also mostly used for global maps and thus
the spherical form is used. To get a 25 -cm-wide world map centered on
the Dateline:
psbasemap -R0/360/-90/90 -JW180/25c -B30g30/15g15:.Mollweide: > moll-
weide.ps
Van der Grinten
The Van der Grinten projection is also mostly used for global maps and
thus the spherical form is used. To get a 7 -inch-wide world map cen-
tered on the Dateline:
psbasemap -R0/360/-90/90 -JV180/7i -B30g30/15g15:."Van der Grinten": >
grinten.ps
RESTRICTIONS
For some projections, a spherical earth is implicitly assumed. A warn-
ing will notify the user if -V is set.
BUGS
The -B option is somewhat complicated to explain and comprehend. How-
ever, it is fairly simple for most applications (see examples).
SEE ALSO
gmtdefaults(l), gmt(l)
GMT4.0 1 Oct 2004 PSBASEMAP(l)
Man(1) output converted with
man2html