GS50, also hyphenated as GS-50,[1] is a map projection that was developed by John Parr Snyder of the USGS in 1982.
The GS50 projection provides a conformal projection suitable only for maps of the 50 United States. Scale varies less than 2% throughout the area covered. Distortion is very low as well. It is not a standard projection in the sense that it uses complex polynomials (of the tenth order) rather than a trigonometric formulation, though it was developed from an oblique stereographic projection.[2]
References
edit- ^ Snyder, John Parr (1987). "Map Projections: A Working Manual" (PDF). Professional Paper. 1395. United States Geological Survey: 205. Retrieved 8 December 2023.
- ^ Snyder, John Parr (1985). "Computer-assisted map projection research" (PDF). Bulletin. 1629. United States Geological Survey: 79–92, 147–51. Retrieved 26 March 2013.