Crowdsourced mapping efforts are helpful in many places, but they're most useful in corners of the globe where even the professional maps are incomplete -- you can address gaps in coverage that might be difficult for distant observers to fill. And OpenStreetMap knows it. The community-driven site has just launched Mapazonia, a project that asks you to help chart the Amazon's rivers and roads. It's not expecting comprehensive data when the area spans 2.1 million square miles, but it believes that your first-hand knowledge could put missing towns on the map and fix inaccuracies in the shoreline.
The OpenStreetMap team sees Mapazonia as potentially vital, not just a convenience. Environmental groups and governments can use the improved info to track development in the region, and it could save lives if there's a natural disaster in an otherwise uncharted area. While it's likely that there will still be quite a few holes in the resulting maps, they'll at least make more sense of a frequently mysterious part of the world.
[Image credit: AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez]
Filed under: Internet
Via: TechDirt
Source: OpenStreetMap Blog, Mapazonia
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