http://visualoop.com/blog/91072/100-outstanding-interactive-maps-of-2015-part-2#
What a great treat we have for all of those interested in visualization and map-making, in this second part of our list with 100 outstanding interactive maps of 2015. Looking back at all the projects we featured week after week, and knowing that we’re leaving out so many that could easily be part of such a selection, we couldn’t be more excited for the year ahead.
This is also our final week of the year (articles-wise, we’ll continue with full support to our gallery even during the holidays), so we’d like to thank you all for the audience, specially those that follow our “Digital Cartography” updates, every Wednesday. We really appreciate it, and hopefully we were able to help you keeping track of what’s being done in the data visualization world,.
In case you missed, here are the posts published so far with our favorite visualizations and infographics of 2015:
- 100 outstanding interactive maps of 2015 – part 1
- 100 print infographics that summarize 2015 – part 1
- 100 great interactive visualizations of 2015 – part 1
And without further ado, 50 more outstanding interactive maps of 2015:
Berlin’s new skyline | Berliner Morgenpost
Top 10 Most Job Accessible Cities in the U.S. | Urban Observatory
El Capitán, Yosemite | UbiLabs / Google Maps
How far birds migrate in a single night | LifeWatch
Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database | Slate
Where the population of Europe is growing – and where it’s declining | Berliner Morgenpost
The Madness of Descent | The Wall Street Journal
Stuff in Space | James Yoder
Is Africa bigger than North America? | Zan Armstrong
United States of Lego | Jeff Friesen, Kenneth Field
Mars Trek | NASA
Inequality | Urban Institute
Musical Map: Cities of the World | Spotify
San Francisco for Sale | The Anti-Eviction Mapping Project
Mapping Segregation | The New York Times
London Smellscape | Rossano Schifanella
Costing Nature | InfoAmazonia
The True Size | James Talmage, Damon Maneice
Urbanscope | Politecnico de Milano
Blame the weather | Matt Chambers
The Globe of Economic Complexity | Owen Cornec, Romain Vuillemot
Mapping how the United States generates its electricity | The Washington Post
Cyber attacks | Norse
Urban centres over a million people in China: 1970-2030 | BBC
Noise in Berlin | Berliner Morgenpost
Flickr Cities | ISI Foundation
Discovering Liquid Water on Mars | Esri
The Oscar Nominees, Mapped | The Wall Street Journal
Sunshine Map | Peter Kerpedjiev
The flow towards Europe | Ville Saarinen, Juho Ojala
Map of the Milky Way | Ruhr University Bochum
Pathways | National Geographic
Geography of Poverty | MSNBC
Do you remember where Germany was divided? | Berliner Morgenpost
How America’s Source of Immigrants Has Changed in the States, 1850 – 2013 | Pew Research Center
Learning to Live With Leopards | National Geographic
Line of Sight | Patricio Gonzalez
Who saves the least money? Financial exclusion around the world | The Guardian
Mapping the Icelandic Sagas | Emily Lethbridge
Global Migration Data | Esri
The human and financial cost of the Indian Ocean tsunami | The Guardian
Refugees/Migrants Emergency Response – Mediterranean | UNHCR
The London skyline of tomorrow | The Guardian
Gun sellers in the United States | The Oregonian
Extreme Weather: The Arctic Connection | National Geographic
Roads to Rome | moovel lab
OpenEarth | Earth Journalism Network
Brazil racial dot map | PATA
How the world searched for the Paris Attacks | Google Trends
That’s it for our special round up of outstanding interactive maps of 2015. We’ll be back in a couple of weeks, but feel free to browse through the hundreds of interactive maps we have on Pinterest. And have a great holiday season!