| Products & Services | Solutions | Academia | Support | User Community | Company |
| Download Product Updates | | | Get Pricing | | | Trial Software |
| Documentation → Mapping Toolbox |
| Contents | Index |
| Learn more about Mapping Toolbox |
Conic
murdoch3
Meridians: Equally spaced straight lines converging at one of the poles.
Parallels: Equally spaced concentric circular arcs.
Poles: Arcs, one of which might become a point in the limit.
Symmetry: About any meridian.
This is an equidistant projection that is minimum-error. Scale is true along any meridian and is constant along any parallel. Scale is also true along two standard parallels. These must be calculated, however (see remark on parallels below). The total area of the mapped area is correct, but it is not equal-area everywhere.
The parallels for this projection are not standard parallels, but rather limiting parallels. The special feature of this map, correct total area, holds between these parallels. The default parallels are [15 75].
Described by Patrick Murdoch in 1758, with errors corrected by Everett in 1904.
This projection is available only for the sphere. Longitude data greater than 135º east or west of the central meridian is trimmed.
landareas = shaperead('landareas.shp','UseGeoCoords',true);
axesm ('murdoch3', 'Frame', 'on', 'Grid', 'on');
geoshow(landareas,'FaceColor',[1 1 .5],'EdgeColor',[.6 .6 .6]);
tissot;

![]() | Murdoch I Conic Projection | Orthographic Projection | ![]() |

Includes the most popular MATLAB recorded presentations with Q&A sessions led by MATLAB experts.
| © 1984-2009- The MathWorks, Inc. - Site Help - Patents - Trademarks - Privacy Policy - Preventing Piracy - RSS |