Space is important to archaeologists, but it can be really easy to have a distorted sense of how big the world is, and how big different parts are compared to each other. One big reason for this globally is that common map projections tend to make more northerly and southerly places appear much larger. But on a local scale, even knowing that a place is so many square kilometres compared to some other place is not always that illuminating. It’s hard for a small human to get their head around big spaces, or abstract ones.
This all matters because what archaeologists study is the human scale of feet-on-ground, and it is easy to lose that when confronted with a top-down view, bird-in-air, which apart from anything else, is pretty much a point of view no human has ever occupied, at least until very recently. It is pretty handy then to find an easy to use online tool called MapFrappe, which allows you to outline a geographic feature, then drag it to anywhere in the world – while preserving its map projection scale.
For example, Vancouver Island is a familiar feature to many NW Coast archaeologists.