Cartography is the study of map making and cartographers are map makers.
Before 1400
- Anaximander, Greek Anatolia (610 BCâÂÂ546 BC), first to attempt making a map of the known world
- Hecataeus of Miletus, Greek Anatolia (550 BCâÂÂ476 BC), geographer, cartographer, and early ethnographer
- Dicaearchus, Magna Graecia (c. 350 BCâÂÂ285 BC), philosopher, cartographer, geographer, mathematician, author
- Ende, Spain (), illustrator, cartographer, nun
- Eratosthenes, Ptolemaic Egypt (276 BCâÂÂ194 BC), Greek scientist, mathematician, geographer, and cartographer
- GyÃ
Âki, Japan (668âÂÂ749), Buddhist monk, cartographer, surveyor, and civil engineer,
- Hipparchus, Greek Anatolia (190 BCâÂÂ120 BC), astronomer, cartographer, geographer
- Liu An, China (179 BCâÂÂ122 BC), geographer, cartographer, author of the Huainanzi
- Marinus of Tyre, Roman Syria (c. AD 70âÂÂ130), Greek geographer, cartographer and mathematician, who founded mathematical geography
- Ptolemy, Ptolemaic Egypt (c. 85âÂÂ165), Greek astronomer, cartographer, and geographer
- Pei Xiu (224âÂÂ271), Chinese geographer and cartographer
- Isidore of Seville, Hispania (560âÂÂ636)
- al-KhwÃÂrazmë, Caliphate (9th century), Persian cartographer, geographer, and polymath.
- Su Song, China (1020âÂÂ1101), horologist and engineer; as a Song dynasty diplomat, he used his knowledge of cartography and map-making to solve territorial border disputes with the rival Liao dynasty
- Shen Kuo, China (1031âÂÂ1095), polymath scientist and statesman, author of the Dream Pool Essays, which included a large atlas of China and foreign regions, and also made a three-dimensional raised-relief map
- al-Idrisi, Sicily (1100âÂÂ1166), Arab cartographer, geographer and traveller
- Maximus Planudes, Byzantine Empire (13th century), a monk credited with restoring the texts and maps of Ptolemy
- Petrus Vesconte, Genoese cartographer, author of the oldest signed Portolan chart (1311)
- Angelino Dulcert (14th century), author of the earliest known Majorcan portolan charts of the Mediterranean
15th century
- Jacobus Angelus, Florence, translated Ptolemy into Latin
- Martin Behaim (Germany, 1436âÂÂ1507)
- Benedetto Bordone (Venetian Republic 1460âÂÂ1551)
- Sebastian Cabot (1476âÂÂ1557), Venetian explorer
- Erhard Etzlaub (1460âÂÂ1532)
- Leonardo da Vinci (Italy, 1452âÂÂ1519)
- Henricus Martellus Germanus (Germany, fl. 1480âÂÂ1496)
- Donnus Nicholas Germanus (Germany, fl. 1460âÂÂ1475)
- Fra Mauro (Venice, c. 1459)
- Piri Reis (Dardanelles, Ottoman Empire, 1465âÂÂ1554/1555), author of the Kitab-ñ Bahriye
- Johannes Ruysch (Netherlands, c. 1466âÂÂ1530), explorer, cartographer, astronomer, manuscript illustrator and painter
- Hartmann Schedel (Germany, 1440âÂÂ1514)
- Amerigo Vespucci (Republic of Florence, 1454âÂÂ1512)
- Johannes Werner (Germany, 1466âÂÂ1528), refined and promoted the Werner map projection
- Martin Waldseemüller (Germany, c. 1470âÂÂc. 1521/1522)
- Olaus Magnus (Olof MÃÂ¥nsson) (Sweden, 1490âÂÂ1557), published Carta Marina in 1539
- Gabriel de Valseca (15th century), Majorcan, author of several portolan charts of the Mediterranean
- (15th century), from Ancona, author of several portolan charts of the Mediterranean
16th century
- Giovanni Battista Agnese (c. 1500âÂÂ1564), Genoese, cartographer, author of numerous nautical atlases
- Hacñ Ahmet, Ottoman Tunisian cartographer, translated 16th c. map into Turkish for the Ottoman Empire.
- Peter Apian (1495âÂÂ1552), also known as Peter Bienewitz, German geographer and astronomer, author of the Apianus projection
- Philipp Apian (1531âÂÂ1589)
- Joost Janszoon Bilhamer (Netherlands, 1541âÂÂ1590)
- Hernando de los RÃÂos Coronel (1559âÂÂ1621?), cosmographer and cartographer, mapped Taiwan (Isla Hermosa), Luzon and part of the Chinese coast.
- Willem Janszoon Blaeu (Netherlands, 1571âÂÂ1638), father of Joan Blaeu
- Giovanni Battista Boazio, mapped Sir Francis Drake's voyage to the West Indies and America
- Anders Bure (Sweden, 1571âÂÂ1646), founder of Swedish cartography
- Jacob Roelofs van Deventer (Netherlands, c. 1510/15âÂÂ1575)
- Fernão Vaz Dourado (India, c. 1520âÂÂc. 1580), Portuguese cartographer of the school initiated by Lopo Homem
- Oronce Finé (France, 1494âÂÂ1555)
- Gemma Frisius (or Reiner Gemma) (Netherlands, 1508âÂÂ1555)
- Jan Van Hanswijk (Netherlands, fl. 1594)
- Martin Helwig (Germany, 1516âÂÂ1574)
- Augustin Hirschvogel (Germany, 1503âÂÂ1553)
- Lopo Homem (Portugal?âÂÂ1565), co-author, with the Reinel family, of the well-known Miller Atlas
- Diogo Homem (Portugal 1521âÂÂ1576), cartographer, son of Lopo Homem
- Jodocus Hondius (Netherlands, 1563âÂÂ1612)
- Johannes Honterus (Transylvania, 1498âÂÂ1549)
- Gerard de Jode (Netherlands, 1509âÂÂ1591)
- Urbano Monti (Italy, 1544âÂÂ1613)
- Jacques le Moyne (France, c. 1533âÂÂ1588)
- Guillaume Le Testu (France, c. 1509âÂÂ1573)
- Jacobus Pentius de Leucho (Italy)
- Gerardus Mercator (Netherlands, 1512âÂÂ1594)
- Sebastian Münster (Germany, 1488âÂÂ1552)
- Abraham Ortelius (France, 1527âÂÂ1598), generally recognized as the creator of the first modern atlas
- Petrus Plancius (Netherlands, 1552âÂÂ1622)
- Diego Gutiérrez (Spain, ?) published a map entitled Americae Sive Quartae Orbis Partis Nova Et Exactissima Descriptio with printer Hieronymus Cock. First map with toponym "California" and first appearance of a word for "Appalachia," as the term "Apalchen."
- Timothy Pont (Scotland, 1565âÂÂ1614)
- Pedro Reinel (Portugal ?âÂÂc. 1542), author of the oldest signed Portuguese nautical chart
- Jorge Reinel (Portugal c. 1502âÂÂc. 1572), Portuguese cartographer, son of Pedro Reinel
- Diogo Ribeiro (Portugal, ?âÂÂSevilha, 1533), author of the first known planisphere with a graduated Equator (1527)
- Sebastião Lopes (Portugal 16th century), Portuguese cartographer and cosmographer
- Christopher Saxton (England, born c. 1540)
- John Speed (England, 1542âÂÂ1629)
- Fernando ÃÂlvares Seco (Portugal, ?âÂÂ?), signed the oldest known map of Portugal, reproduced in various editions of Abraham Ortelius's Theatrum Orbis Terrarum
- Bernardus Sylvanus (Italy)
- LuÃÂs Teixeira (Portugal, ?âÂÂ?), author of an important atlas of Brazil
- Bartolomeu Velho (Portugal, ?âÂÂ1568), cosmographer and cartographer
- Lucas Janszoon Waghenaer (Netherlands, 1533/34âÂÂ1605/06), driver, cartographer
- Edward Wright (mathematician) (England, 1561âÂÂ1615), mathematician and cartographer
- Georg Braun (Germany, 1541âÂÂ1622), cartographer
17th century
- Pieter van der Aa (Netherlands, 1659âÂÂ1733)
- João Teixeira Albernaz I (Portugal, died c. 1664), prolific cartographer, son of LuÃÂs Teixeira
- João Teixeira Albernaz II (Portugal, died c. 1699), Portuguese cartographer
- Pedro Teixeira Albernaz (Portugal, c. 1595âÂÂ1662), Portuguese cartographer author of an important atlas of the Iberian Peninsula and a map of Portugal (1656)
- Guillaume Le Vasseur de Beauplan (France, c. 1600âÂÂ1673), French cartographer who created first descriptive map of Ukraine
- François Berthelot (France), cartographer of the Mediterranean Sea
- Johannes Blaeu (Netherlands, 1596âÂÂ1673)
- Emanuel Bowen (1693/4âÂÂ1767), engraver and map maker
- Greenville Collins (British, 1643âÂÂ1694)
- Vincenzo Coronelli (Venetian, 1650âÂÂ1718)
- Guillaume Delisle (French, 1675âÂÂ1726)
- Petter Gedda (Sweden, 1661âÂÂ1697)
- Hessel Gerritsz (Netherlands, 1581âÂÂ1632), cartographer for the VOC
- Isaak de Graaff (Netherlands, 1668âÂÂ1743), cartographer for the VOC
- Johann Homann (Germany, 1664âÂÂ1724), geographer
- Henricus Hondius (Netherlands, 1597âÂÂ1651)
- Willem Hondius (Netherlands, 1598âÂÂ1652/58)
- Johannes Janssonius (Netherlands, 1588âÂÂ1664)
- Johannes van Keulen (Netherlands, 1654âÂÂ1715)
- Joannes de Laet (Netherlands, 1581âÂÂ1649)
- Michael van Langren (Netherlands, 1600âÂÂ1675)
- Alain Manesson Mallet (France, 1630âÂÂ1706)
- Matthäus Merian Sr. (Switzerland, 1593âÂÂ1650) and Jr. (Switzerland, 1621âÂÂ1687)
- David de Meyne (Netherlands, c. 1569âÂÂ1620)
- Herman Moll (Germany?/England, 1654âÂÂ1732)
- Robert Morden (England, 1650âÂÂ1703)
- Giovan Battista Nicolosi (Italy, 1610âÂÂ1670)
- Dirck Rembrantsz van Nierop (Netherlands, 1610âÂÂ1682), cartographer, mathematician and astronomist
- Jean-Baptiste Nolin (France, c.1657âÂÂ1708)
- John Ogilby (Scotland, 1600âÂÂ1676)
- (England, 16xxâÂÂ1743)
- Nicolas Sanson (France, 1600âÂÂ1667)
- Peter Schenk the Elder (Germany, 1660âÂÂ1718/19)
- Johannes Vingboons (Netherlands, 1616/17âÂÂ1670), cartographer and aquarellist
- Georg Matthäus Vischer (Austria, 1628âÂÂ1696), cartographer, topographer and engraver
- Claes Jansz Visscher (Netherlands, 1587âÂÂ1652)
- Nicolaes Visscher I (Netherlands, 1618âÂÂ1679)
- Frederik de Wit (Netherlands, 1610/16âÂÂ1698)
- Nicolaes Witsen (Netherlands, 1641âÂÂ1717), diplomat, cartographer, writer and mayor of Amsterdam
- Giovanni Cassini ( Cassini I, Italy & France, 1625âÂÂ1712)
- Jacques Cassini (a.k.a. Cassini II, France, 1677âÂÂ1756)
18th century
- John James Abert (United States, 1788âÂÂ1863), headed the Corps of Topographical Engineers for 32 years and organized the mapping of the American West
- Anders ÃÂ
kerman (Sweden, 1721/23âÂÂ1778), first globemaker in Sweden
- John Arrowsmith (England, 1790âÂÂ1873), member of the Arrowsmith family of geographers
- Louis Albert Guislain Bacler d'Albe (France, 1761âÂÂ1824), also artist and longtime strategic advisor to Napoleon
- John Senex (1690âÂÂ1740), engraver, publisher, surveyor and geographer to Queen Anne
- John Lodge Cowley, cartographer, mathematician and geographer
- Agostino Codazzi (Italy, 1793âÂÂ1858)
- Joseph Frederick Wallet DesBarres (1721âÂÂ1824), created Atlantic Neptune
- Giambattista (Giovanni Battista) Albrizzi (Venice, 1698âÂÂ1777), publisher of illustrated books and maps
- Sieur le Rouge, map c. 1740
- John Gibson (cartographer), map c. 1758
- Jacques-Nicolas Bellin (1703âÂÂ1772), chief cartographer to the French navy
- William Bligh (England, 1754âÂÂ57 December 1817), Ships Master during the infamous Bounty mutiny and noted free-hand cartographer
- Rigobert Bonne (France, 1727âÂÂ1795), Royal Cartographer to France in the office of the Hydrographer at Depot de la Marine
- Jean Baptiste Bourguignon d'Anville (France, 1697âÂÂ1782)
- Don Tomas Lopez de Vargas Machuca (Spain, 1730âÂÂ1802)
- Lourenco Homem da Cunha dâÂÂEca, created , 1808
- Abel Buell (1742âÂÂ1822), published the first map of the new United States created by an American
- Catharina Buijs (1714âÂÂ1781), Dutch cartographer for the Dutch East India Company
- Dimitrie Cantemir (Moldavia and Russia, 1673âÂÂ1723)
- César-François Cassini de Thury (a.k.a. Cassini III, France, 1714âÂÂ1784)
- Jean-Dominique Cassini (a.k.a. Cassini IV, France, 1748âÂÂ1845)
- Edme Mentelle (France, 1730âÂÂ1816)
- Pierre Gilles Chanlair (France, 1758âÂÂ1817)
- James Cook (Captain RN) (1728âÂÂ1779), navigator and naval chart maker
- Simeon De Witt (1756âÂÂ1834), successor to Robert Erskine and Surveyor-General of the State of New York
- Louis Isidore Duperrey (French, 1786âÂÂ1865)
- Johann Friedrich Endersch (Germany, fl. 1755)
- Colonel Robert Erskine (1735âÂÂ1780), geographer and Surveyor-General of the Continental Army during the American Revolution
- Joseph de Ferraris (1726âÂÂ1814), Austrian cartographer of the Austrian Netherlands
- Matthew Flinders (British, 1774âÂÂ1814), Royal Navy officer; circumnavigated Australia and made exploration of the Australian coastline
- Joseph Marx Baron von Liechtenstern (Austria, 1765âÂÂ1828)
- Louis Feuillée (France, 1660âÂÂ1732)
- Björn Gunnlaugsson (Iceland, 1788âÂÂ1876)
- Fielding Lucas, Jr. (c. 1781âÂÂ1854), of the Lucas Brothers, Baltimore, US
- J. Flyn "New and Correct Plan of London", 1770
- Samuel Gustaf Hermelin (Sweden, 1744âÂÂ1820)
- Thomas Jefferys (England, c. 1710âÂÂ1771), geographer of King George III of the United Kingdom
- William Faden (England, 1749âÂÂ1836), successor to Thomas Jefferys
- Pierre Jacotin (France, 1765âÂÂ1829)
- Murdoch McKenzie (Scotland, died 1797)
- John Mitchell (1711âÂÂ1768), colonial British American mapmaker
- Thomas Livingstone Mitchell (England, 1792âÂÂ1855)
- Robert Moresby (England, 1794âÂÂ1863)
- Thomas Moule (England, 1784âÂÂ1851)
- Carlton Osgood (United States, â 1816)
- Adriaan Reland (Netherlands, 1676âÂÂ1718), linguist and cartographer
- Thomas Richardson (Scotland)
- Dider Robert de Vaugondy (France, 1688âÂÂ1766)
- John Rocque (England, 1709âÂÂ1762)
- David Watson, surveyed Scotland post 1747 to produce The Duke of Cumberland's Map
- William Roy (England, 1726âÂÂ1790)
- William Mudge (England, 1762âÂÂ1820)
- Thomas Frederick Colby (England, 1784âÂÂ1852)
- Matthäus Seutter (Germany, 1678âÂÂ1757)
- Friedrich Wilhelm Carl von Schmettau (1743âÂÂ1806)
- Matthias Seutter (Germany, 1678âÂÂ1757)
- Jacob Swart (Netherlands, 1796âÂÂ1866)
- InÃ
 Tadataka (Japan, 1745âÂÂ1818), Surveyor and cartographer who completed the first surveyed map of Japan
- David Thompson (BritishâÂÂCanadian, 1770âÂÂ1857)
- Daniel-Charles Trudaine (France, 1703âÂÂ1769)
- Philip Johan von Strahlenberg (1676âÂÂ1747)
- Thomas Kitchin (1718âÂÂ1784), London-based cartographer and engraver of maps of England, greater Europe, and parts of the British Empire.; at one time held the titles "Senior Hydrographer to His Majesty" and "Senior Engraver to His Royal Highness the Duke of York"
- Friedrich Christoph Müller (Germany, 1751âÂÂ1808)
- Philippe Vandermaelen (Belgium, 1795âÂÂ1869)
- Alexander Wilbrecht (Russia, 1757âÂÂ1823), geographer of the Geographic Department of the Cabinet of Her Imperial Majesty
- Emma Willard (United States, 1787âÂÂ1870), women's rights activist and education reformer
- James Wilson (United States, 1763âÂÂ1835), first maker of globes in the United States
- George Washington (United States of America, 1732âÂÂ1799), first president of the United States; cartographer
- Henri Michelot (France, born c. 1664), Marseilles, France, hydrographer and pilot of the Royal Galley
19th century
- Robert Aitken of Beith. born c. 1786
- Carlo de Candia (1803âÂÂ1862), Italian cartographer, created the large maritime map of Sardinia in 1: 250,000 scale, travel version.
- John Bartholomew the elder (26 April 1805 â 8 April 1861), Scottish cartographer and engraver.
- Henry Peter Bosse (Germany/United States, 1844âÂÂ1903), also photographer and civil engineer
- Abraham Bradley Jr. (1767âÂÂ1838), created first postal road maps of the United States
- George Bradshaw (England, 1801âÂÂ1853)
- Eugenia Wheeler Goff (United States, 1844âÂÂ1922), combined history, resources, and geography
- Leslie George Bullock (1895âÂÂ1971)
- Bernard J. S. Cahill (1867âÂÂ1944), inventor of octahedral "Butterfly Map" of the world
- Ambrose F. Church (died 1920), mapmaker in Nova Scotia, Canada
- George Comer (1858âÂÂ1937)
- John Paul Goode (1862âÂÂ1932), created the "Evil Mercator" and GoodeâÂÂs World Atlas
- Hermann Haack (Germany, 1872âÂÂ1966)
- Eduard Imhof (1895âÂÂ1986), oversaw the Schweizerischer Mittelschulatlas, the atlas used in Swiss
- James Ireland Craig (1868âÂÂ1952), inventor of the Craig retroazimuthal projection, otherwise known as the Mecca projection
- J. H. Colton (United States, 1800âÂÂ1893)
- Carl Diercke (1842âÂÂ1913)
- Max Eckert-Greifendorff (Germany, 1868âÂÂ1938)
- Percy Fawcett (1867âÂÂ1925), British explorer of South America
- Matthew Fontaine Maury (United States, 1806âÂÂ1873), U.S. Navy officer; also oceanographer, meteorologist, cartographer, author, geologist, and educator
- Matsuura TakeshirÃ
 (Japan, 1818âÂÂ1888), explorer, cartographer, writer, painter, priest, and antiquarian.
- Thaddeus Mortimer Fowler (1842âÂÂ1922), American producer of pictorial maps
- Charles F. Hoffmann (Germany/United States, 1838âÂÂ1913)
- James Gardner
- Charles E. Goad (1848âÂÂ1910), English Canadian cartographer and pioneer of insurance maps
- William Hughes (geographer) FRGS (1818 â 21 May 1876), English geographer, mapmaker, cartographer and author.
- Gwynneth de Candia Vaughan (England 1879 - ?), British cartographer, mapmaker in the Australian territories.
- Felix Jones (England, 1813âÂÂ1878)
- Florence Kelley (United States, 1859âÂÂ1932), political reformer, director of the Chicago portion of the Hull House Maps and Papers
- Peter Kozler (Slovenia, 1824âÂÂ1879), lawyer, geographer, politician, manufacturer
- Lilian Lancaster (1852âÂÂ1939), British creator of anthropomorphic maps
- Rudolf Leuzinger (Switzerland, 1826âÂÂ1896), known for mountain landscapes and geologic forms and the first to produce terrain maps in color lithography.
- Victor Adolphe Malte-Brun (France, 1816âÂÂ1889)
- Heinrich Theodor Menke (Germany, 1819âÂÂ1892)
- August Heinrich Petermann (18 April 1822 â 25 September 1878), German cartographer
- George Philip (1800âÂÂ1882), cartographer, map publisher and founder of the publishing house George Philip & Son Ltd.
- Erwin Raisz (1893âÂÂ1968)
- Daniel Alfred Sanborn (United States, 1827âÂÂ1883), founder of the prolific insurance map provider Sanborn Map Company
- William Schmollinger (fl. 1830s)
- William R. Shepherd (1871âÂÂ1934)
- Yuly Shokalsky (Russia, 1856âÂÂ1940), also oceanographer and geographer
- Karl Spruner von Merz (Germany, 1803âÂÂ1892)
- John Tallis and Company (England, 1838âÂÂ1851)
- Nicolas Auguste Tissot (France, 1824âÂÂ1897), devised Tissot's indicatrix
- Shanawdithit (Canada, c. 1801âÂÂ1829), created maps depicting the movement Beothuk people in Newfoundland
- Edward A. Vincent (England/United States, c. 1825âÂÂ27 November 1856), cartographer, civil engineer, architect
- Nain Singh Rawat (India, 1830âÂÂ1882), Cartographer and explorer
- Cope, Emmor B: Gettysburg Battlefield cartographer and first Gettysburg National Military Park superintendent
- Alexandre Vuillemin (France, 1812âÂÂ1880)
- Ruth Taylor White (United States 1899 â ?), creator of pictorial maps of the United States
- John Francon Williams FRGS (1854âÂÂ4 September 1911), editor, journalist, writer, geographer, historian, cartographer and inventor.
- Fanny Bullock Workman (United States, 1859âÂÂ1925), geographer, cartographer, explorer, travel writer, and mountaineer
- James Wyld (England, 1812âÂÂ1887)
- HatsusaburÃ
 Yoshida (Japan, 1884âÂÂ1955)
20th century
- Jacques Bertin (France, 1918âÂÂ2010)
- Josef Breu (Austria, 1914âÂÂ1998)
- Cynthia Brewer (United States, 1957â ), developed ColorBrewer, professor at Penn State University
- Roger Brunet (1931â )
- Emanuela Casti (1950â ), formalized a semiotic theory of geographic maps
- Danny Dorling (1968â ), developed circular cartograms
- Marion A. Frieswyk (United States, 1922âÂÂ2021), first female intelligence cartographer in the Central Intelligence Agency
- Ruth Rhoads Lepper Gardner (United States, 1905âÂÂ2011), cartographer of the Maine coast
- Richard Edes Harrison (1901âÂÂ1994)
- Tom Harrisson (1911âÂÂ1976)
- George F. Jenks (1916âÂÂ1996)
- Elrey Borge Jeppesen (1907âÂÂ1996)
- Ingrid Kretschmer (1939âÂÂ2011)
- Samuel Herbert Maw (1881âÂÂ1952), architect, delineator and cartographer of Canada
- Kate McLean (United Kingdom) Best known for creating olfactory maps of cities
- Jess Miller (United States, 1988â ), artist, photographer, and cartographer of rural Arkansas
- Mark Monmonier (United States, 1943â ), wrote How to Lie with Maps and created the Monmonier Algorithm. Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Syracuse University
- Mark Newman (1968â ), developed area contiguous cartograms using a diffusion-based method
- Rafael Palacios (1905âÂÂ1993), prolific map-drawer for major US publishers
- Phyllis Pearsall (England, 1906âÂÂ1996), creator of the Geographers' AâÂÂZ Street Atlas
- Jacques Pervititch (Turkey, 1877âÂÂ1945), creator of series of insurance maps of Istanbul
- Edward Ayearst Reeves (1862âÂÂ1945), British geographer, astronomer, and cartographer
- Arthur H. Robinson (1915âÂÂ2004), wrote the influential textbook Elements of Cartography and developed the Robinson projection
- Abbas Sahab (1921âÂÂ2000), Iranian cartographer, produced the first atlas of the Persian Gulf
- Paula Scher (United States, 1948â ), graphic designer, painter
- Nikolas Schiller (1980â ), Arabesque maps composed of kaleidoscopic aerial photographs
- Erwin Schneider (1906-1987), Austrian mountaineer and cartographer
- Jessamine Shumate (1902âÂÂ1990)
- Kira B. Shingareva (Russia, 1938âÂÂ2013), first person to successfully map the dark side of the moon
- John P. Snyder (1926âÂÂ1997), developed the space oblique Mercator projection
- Dr. E. Lee Spence (1947â ), pioneer underwater archaeologist, decorative, historical maps showing shipwreck locations
- Marie Tharp (1920âÂÂ2006), oceanographic cartographer, co-created the first scientific map of the ocean floor with Bruce Heezen
- Norman J. W. Thrower (1919âÂÂ2002), professor at UCLA and author who was known for work in geography, surveying practices, and history
- Waldo R. Tobler (1930âÂÂ2018), developed the first law of geography
- Bradford Washburn (1910âÂÂ2007)
- Denis Wood (United States, 1945â ), artist, author, and former professor of design at North Carolina State University
- David Woodward (1942âÂÂ2004)
See also
References