![]() Naps serve a key function for young kids. “After two hours, I was so flustered that I spent the rest of the day just angry that she hadn’t slept.” “I would spend the entire time running up trying to get her to fall asleep or yelling at her for getting out of bed,” said the 32-year-old Calgary mom of two. But the rambunctious 2½-year-old refused to nod off. She’d lie with her, read another story, sing yet another song. ![]() This time, the shapefile had polygons of the reefs.Kelly Sturtevant tried everything to get daughter Keira to nap. Cambridge (UK): UN Environment World Conservation Monitoring Centre. URL: įreiwald A, Fosså JH, Grehan A, Koslow T, Roberts JM (2004). (2004) by UNEP-WCMC, in collaboration with Andre Freiwald and John Guinotte. Fifth update to the dataset in Freiwald et al. Global distribution of cold-water corals (version 5.0). That’s something I didn’t know before! There’s nothing like a good challenge to learn new things.įreiwald A, Rogers A, Hall-Spencer J, Guinotte JM, AJ Davies, Yesson C, Martin CS, Weatherdon LV (2017). I was surprised to see so many entries in Europe. The geography of the shapefile was in points. One of the ways to achieve this, without having a crazy shapefile displaying in QGIS is this tutorial. And because it’s just good to change approaches. I also picked a Pacific Centred projection because I didn’t want to slice the Great Barrier Reef. I wanted both maps to have the same projection and approach, with the colours as the only different elements. The first one displays the global distribution of cold-water coral the second one, the global distribution of coral reefs. The current events around the US Elections have kept me busy… But I’m trying to catch up! I’ll keep it simple.īoth the Blue and the Red entry visualise the same topic. Publicado el 1 noviembre, 2021 31 octubre, 2021 Autor Irene de la Torre Categorías Design, maps Etiquetas 30 Day Map Challenge, hospitals, maps, Qgis, spain Deja un comentario 30 Day Map Challenge ~ Green & Yellow ![]() I’d like to further study this relationship in another entry in the Challenge. But you also see areas with less population with only one public center. Although the map does not contain this information, you can quickly identify the main cities in Spain, with many private and public hospitals. My goal was to see the distribution of hospitals in Spain and observe if regions with less population density had more or less public or private hospitals. The rest had to be geolocated traditionally: searching in google. I matched around 400 hospitals using only the names of the hospitals and 200 using the addresses. Although the original dataset was very complete, I wasn’t able to geolocate many of the entries with OpenStreetMap, especially those that had Catalan, Galician, or Vasc words or characters. The data that comes directly from the Spanish Ministry of Health includes the names, addresses, regions, emails, etc. So skipping all the personal and professional news, I’ll go to the main subject of interest: the first entry of the Challenge, which is dedicated to points. And although quite a lot has happened since then, that should probably be part of its own article. My last post was also dedicated to the 2020 edition. It’s November! It’s that time of the year again: the 30 Day Map Challenge has arrived. Sigue leyendo → Publicado el 5 enero, 2022 8 enero, 2022 Autor Irene de la Torre Categorías Conferencias, Design, Information Design, maps, UCB Etiquetas 30 Day Map Challenge, Data Visualization, generative art, information design, maps, summary Deja un comentario Summary of 2020. That’s why the idea to change from a news organization to a company driven by science (pharmaceutical companies are exactly that) was quite interesting for me. It is an experience I cherish because it made me a better designer: it pushed me to innovate and taught me how new technologies get developed. I had already worked in science and research at the MIT Senseable City Lab. If you want to know more about the reasons for the move, you can check the 2020 summary. I moved from London to Munich, left a country where I spoke the language for one where I struggle to understand people, and started a new job in a completely new field: the pharmaceutical industry. I changed my country of residence, language (sort of), and jobs.
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