1. Asphalt Maine
Looking down upon the patched-up surface of an unnamed street, J. David Lovejoy couldn’t help noticing a remarkable example of accidental geography. The patch bears a striking resemblance to Maine, imitating its slanted, almost-straight northwestern border with Quebec, the flat-top border in the north, and straight down again along the border with New Brunswick. The Atlantic coast is less than perfect and the manhole prevents a southward jut towards Kittery on the state line with New Hampshire, but these are minor quibbles. The overall impression is clearly that of Maine. Just under a year ago, this blog displayed a few instances of what has been called cartocacoethes (i.e. the uncontrollable urge to see maps in everyday, non-cartography-related objects; see #350). As promised at the time, other examples submitted would be collected in a follow-up post, a long-dormant project now awakened by Mr Lovejoy’s Asphalt Maine.
2. Squagellan
“Some squirrel nibbled the continent of South America on one of my pumpkins,” reported Seth Masket. “It’s freaking me out.” Seth named this inadvertent piece of pumpkin cartography Squagellan, a portmanteau of the culprit, and the explorer Magellan (who sailed around the continent along the Straits that bear his name). Curiously, there are no squirrels in South America.
3. Mosstralia
Brian Olewnick suggested the work of artist Nina Katchadourian, who in the early 1990s made a series of accidental maps based on moss formations. More information here on the artist’s website.
“There is a type of lichen which is very common in the Finnish archipelago and my family’s summer house sits on a large granite hill covered with it. I have always seen certain shapes as islands or continents, and decided to affix rub-on letters directly to the lichens to identify them as the places I recognized. When I had finished, the whole hill had become a kind of scrambled atlas.”
4. Rustralia
Alan Dow took this photo of a bit of rust on a steel smoking shelter at work. “I was just testing the macro function on my new camera and didn’t notice the remarkable similarity to Australia at the time! Yes? No?”
Link here.
5. Drown Under
“I always thought this one looked roughly like Australia”, writes kwigibo. “What with tides and erosion being what they are in this particular body of water I’m sure it looked a lot more like Australia at one point.”
6. Urinalia
For some strange reason, the shape of Australia is a popular subject of cartocacoethes. This one was taken by Christian Rothholz in the men’s room of a cinema in Hamburg, Germany. The peculiar shape of this piece of chewing gum had been noticed by other patrons, who had added the words Australia and Down Under to it for good measure.
7. Gingerbread DC
Sent in by Nikolas Schiller, the cartographic artist, blogger and tireless advocate for Washington DC’s repesentation in Congress. The gingerbread, with straight lines on three sides, does mirror the instantly recognisable shape of DC. The District of Columbia was selected as the nation’s capital in 1790 on a site along the banks of the Potomac River. Originally a perfect square with 10 miles to each side, with territory taken from both Maryland (on the Potomac’s northern bank) and Virginia (on the southern bank), DC achieved its present irregular shape with the return of all territory south of the Potomac to Virginia in 1846.
8. Estonia Door Mat
A picture of this door mat was was sent in by Teele Tani, from Riga in Latvia. The worn-out patch on the door mat resembles Latvia’s northern neighbour, Estonia. Recognising your neighbouring country in a door mat might seem disrespectful, but the resemblance, it has to be admitted, is uncanny, with even the Baltic islands of Hiiumaa and Saaremaa recognisable in their respective positions north and south off Estonia’s western coastline.
9. Montana Wall Map
“My church rents space in a much older church building in the Columbia Heights neighborhood of Washington, DC,” writes Evan Sparks. “A few weeks ago, the church that owns the building began a renovation project in the nave that includes replastering parts of the wall. To my delight, one of the sections currently in progress looks uncannily like the state of Montana.”
10. Eggmerica
This sunny side up map of Eggmerica was sent in by Cory Zacker: “When I emailed this to my aunt, her reply was, Wow! Lots of sun in the Midwest!” It takes some squinting to recognise the shape of the (contiguous) US, but some of the country’s most easily recognised shapes are all there, albeit in somewhat distorted form – the slight convexity of the west coast, the concavity of the east coast, the Maine, Florida and southern Texas protrusions and the bend of the Gulf Coast connecting the latter two.
11. United Steak
Similarly, this steak conveys, however imperfectly, some of the US’s outer shapes.”I call it The United Steak of America”, says Jeff Malec, who sent it in.
12. A More Perfect Union
Another steak, another US map (this one sent in by Radich Kulker). The steak looks real, but the borders are too perfect – was an initial likeness moulded into a more perfect one? By hand or photoshop?
13. United Cracks
This picture – again of something resembling the US – was taken by Liam Mulshine on a trip along Italy’s Amalfi Coast. “We hiked by (and through) many buildings that were completely abandoned on the steep hills not far from the Mediterranean. Looking by the front door of one of the buildings, I suddenly saw a little grey map of the United States, ran up to get a closer look, and was astounded to discover it was (as far as I could tell) just a large crack in the building, where some material had fallen off. It just happens to look amazingly like the US! Overlooking some imperfections (like the peninsula jutting out of North Carolina), the similarities are really intriguing- there’s Texas, Florida, the Puget Sound in Washington State, the straight-line border with Canda in the Northwest, Maine, and even EACH of the Great Lakes!”
14. Napkin US
And to conclude the series of US-impersonating objects, here’s a napkin posing as the Lower 48, sent in by Eric D. Meyerson, found here.
15. The Land of the Long White Cloud
Michelle Holshue sent in this picture, which she took in Costa Rica some years ago. The cloud formation over the ocean reminded her of New Zealand – and with some justification: the angle of the cloud constellation conforms to that of the New Zealand archipelago’s two main islands on most maps. The top of the cloud is shaped like NZ’s North Island, its bottom like South Island. A break in the cloud formation suggests the Cook Strait, separating both islands. The similarity between the cloud and the country is even more striking when one considers that the indigenous Maori name for New Zealand is Aotearoa, a name commonly translated as… the land of the long white cloud.
16. Afrika Stan
Africa is a piece of stucco missing from a wall in Stockholm’s gamla stan (old town), sent in by Michele Aquila. The likeness is rather tenuous, but gets the general bow-shapedness (i.e. the position of the Gulf of Guinea) of the continent right. There’s even a little protrusion where the Horn of Africa should be.
17. Café Latino
Emmanuel Parfond also suffers from the occasional bout of cartocacoethes*. Like when he took this picture, of South America showing up in his cup of coffee. Again, a rather rudimentary shape, and not altogether dissimilar to the African one discussed above. But something – the slenderness of the figure, the angle of the coastlines, or maybe the fact that this was a nice cup of Colombian coffee – suggests South America rather than Africa.
18. Surreal Cereal: Illinois As a Corn Flake
Thanks to Peter Gordon Kurilecz for pointing out this bizarre and lucrative example of cartocacoethes. Two Virginia sisters sold this Illinois-shaped corn flake on eBay for $1,350 to someone who intended to add it to a travelling trivia museum. The story made the headlines in March 2008, linked to here.
19. Air New Jersey
Jim sent in this picture of a cloud-lookalike of New Jersey, with the state’s two interlocking shapes of North Jersey and South Jersey easily recognisable. However, the state is tilted too much towards the left.
20. Argentine Floor Map
“On the floor of my grandmother’s house I see the shape of a province of my country called Entre Ríos, which is the province where I live,” writes Carlos Zelayeta from Argentina. “Entre Ríos has two coasts: the Paraná coast in the west, and the Uruguay coast in the east. The Paraná coast is quite similar to this map. At the south of Uruguay is missing a curve in the Gualeguaychú latitude. There is a little line that gets to Uruguay coast and it could be the stream ‘El Palmar’. The part over Entre Ríos is similar to the province of Corrientes, with the two rivers coming from the north.” For those not familiar with the shape of the aforementioned province, compare here.
21. Double Whammy on a Granadilla
Let’s finish this series on a double whammy, sent in by Ricardo Rodríguez Quintero from Colombia after reading the previous cartacacoethical entry on this blog: “I was about to eat a granadilla and just before smashing it, I couldn’t help seeing USA’s map on its skin and when I turned it around I could find a (less accurate and/or obvious) map of Thailand. Maybe my ‘cartocacoethical’ sense sharpened after reading your post.”
Now you’ve read this entry, this might happen to you too. If you see any exceptional examples of cartocacoethes/cartococcygia, please do send them in!
—————
*: Cacoethes is a Greek word used to express uncontrollable urge or desire, especially for something harmful. Strange Maps might be prejudiced, but we think seeing maps everywhere is harmless, if not downright beneficial. A somewhat friendlier term for the condition suggested by one of the commenters in the original post is cartococcygia. Literally: maps built by cuckoos – analogous to nephelococcygia (a term for seeing shapes in clouds, from The Birds by Aristophanes , literally: clouds built by cuckoos)
























Number 12 is actually done by Dominic Episcopo (http://www.episcopo.com/) he has an entire series of such things that you may be interested in.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/09/04/the-united-steaks-of-amer_n_277529.html
Comment by ddunlop — November 23, 2009 @ 2:46 am
There are squirrels on South America. Maybe they are not natives, but they are there and on some areas they’re a serious pest.
Comment by H — November 23, 2009 @ 3:00 am
Don’t know if you’ve mentioned this before but there’s a cave near Tangiers, Morocco that has an outline similar to Africa backwards (or round the right way if you were looking inwards, I guess). See http://is.gd/51rpy
Comment by Peter Cooper — November 23, 2009 @ 3:18 am
“the slight concavity of the west coast, the convexity of the east coast”
I think you may have those backwards. I always use “con-cave” to remember that it curves in.
Comment by DetailBear — November 23, 2009 @ 3:35 am
I think you mean convexity of the West Coast, and concavity of the East Coast on #10. But maybe I am reading you wrong.
Comment by John Curran — November 23, 2009 @ 3:42 am
The “Africa” in Stockholm is quite well documented on Flickr:
http://www.flickr.com/search/?q=stockholm+afrika&ss=2&s=int
Comment by pni — November 23, 2009 @ 7:35 am
found this at Life Cafe in NYC:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/27857788@N02/3978363212/
Comment by zach wilson — November 23, 2009 @ 12:41 pm
Australia on the mud…http://roadbook.blogspot.com/2007/02/caprichos-geogrficos-da-me-natureza.html
Comment by Gonçalo Pais — November 23, 2009 @ 12:45 pm
@ DetailBear (#4) & John Curran (#5):
You are right. Should have doublechecked! Corrected…
Comment by strangemaps — November 23, 2009 @ 1:45 pm
Israel oil stain
http://hametzion.blogspot.com/2009/08/6-2009.html
Comment by Barak — November 23, 2009 @ 4:14 pm
Of course there are squirrels in South America!
Comment by Lvcivs — November 23, 2009 @ 4:16 pm
The first side of the granadilla looks to me more like Canada than the US — I can see Vancouver Island, Nova Scotia, and the Queen Elizabeth Islands in the north.
Comment by Salvo — November 23, 2009 @ 6:17 pm
Thank you for including the Gingerbread DC map in this collection. The original photograph was taken by Allison Acosta and first spotted on DCist.com. Cookie aside, the 600,000 residents of the federally administered city-state known as the District of Columbia deserve the same representation in Congress afforded to all other Americans. The U.S. Constitution was changed once for the District of Columbia, and I expect it to be changed again in the future.
Comment by Nikolas Schiller — November 23, 2009 @ 9:09 pm
#1 also looks a bit like the old DDR (a.k.a. East Germany).
Comment by Dom_SMC — November 23, 2009 @ 9:44 pm
does anyone know where number 5 is?
Comment by kevin — November 23, 2009 @ 10:04 pm
Doesn’t the first one look more like Belarus than Maine?
Comment by alig — November 23, 2009 @ 10:29 pm
The Illinois corn flake should have used a Lincoln-head penny for sizing…
Comment by Brian Westley — November 23, 2009 @ 10:41 pm
@15 – I agree with this as well.
As to the granadilla, I also see the US in the first picture, but I don’t see Thailand at all. What I do see is N. America or possibly the western hemisphere (however listing a bit towards the southeast, if the fruit were a globe) – Alaska and the Gulf of Mexico are clearly visible, a case can be made for the Yucatan and possibly even Florida, and a (severely atrophied) S. America might even be made out below it.
Comment by David Kendall — November 23, 2009 @ 11:01 pm
love it loveit, keep up the good work
Comment by Linda — November 23, 2009 @ 11:31 pm
Kevin – it might be Miami. Not sure.
Comment by John — November 24, 2009 @ 1:09 am
thanks linda, but I figured it out. Its surfer’s paradise, australia
Comment by kevin — November 24, 2009 @ 2:49 am
My first thought on #1 was that it looks like the recently defunct nation of Serbia and Montenegro (rump Yugoslavia).
Comment by Lazar — November 24, 2009 @ 4:29 am
[...] (and baked?) by Allison Acosta. Take a look at the rest of the “Found Maps” here. If you haven’t checked it out yet, take a look at the Frank Jacobs new book Strange Maps [...]
Pingback by My Accidental Geography Submission “Gingerbread DC” Was Featured Today on StrangeMaps « The Daily Render by Nikolas R. Schiller — November 24, 2009 @ 8:44 am
#5 is not technically Surfer’s Paradise, although SP is visible in the background. It is the Broadwater just off of Southport, another suburb of Gold Coast City. Surfer’s Paradise is the area around the 2 really tall buildings poking above the horizon, it’s not the whole place.
I wish I had taken that picture myself, it really captures the place, and those sandbars in the broadwater have probably looked like every country at some point.
Comment by kwigibo — November 24, 2009 @ 10:21 am
[...] The post at Strange Maps is here, and includes asphalt Maines, many versions of Australia, even a food-based District of Columbia. [...]
Pingback by [liff] Pareidolia: New Jersey In The Sky « The ZehnKatzen Times — November 24, 2009 @ 12:44 pm
I also agree that the granadilla looks more like Canada than the US.
But the shape I immediatly saw in it is no other than the USSR.
You’ve got Carelia in the northwest, Vladivostok in the southeast, the Ob estuary, a buldge in the south for central Asia, and even a hint of what could be Kamtchatka.
The only problems are the big shapes on the top, way bigger than the real Russian polar islands.
see in comparison :
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/75/Union_of_Soviet_Socialist_Republics_%28orthographic_projection%29.svg
Comment by quiche — November 24, 2009 @ 1:09 pm
Here is Old San Juan’s famous “Africa” map (let’s see if this works…):
http://www.flickr.com/photos/jose_kevo/2097334779/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/kapten/3063402253/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/michemay/3278613527/
Comment by javier — November 24, 2009 @ 6:54 pm
[...] 424 – Accidental Geography, the Long-Overdue Sequel [...]
Pingback by Letture quotidiane - Leggetevi questi – 24 November 2009 — November 24, 2009 @ 7:25 pm
Thanks 4 the information. Nice article….!
Comment by Dokter Pulsa — November 25, 2009 @ 2:15 am
In the Montana pic, the bucket is roughly at Great Falls and the water jug is roughly at Miles City.
Comment by K — November 25, 2009 @ 6:50 am
[...] meaningful shapes in random arrangements is well documented – from religious icons on toast to a map of Estonia in a doormat. Fascinating cartographic blog Strange Maps has coined the terms “cartocacoethes” and [...]
Pingback by Finding LOVE in All The Wrong Places - AMOcoccygia? at SuperForest — November 25, 2009 @ 9:43 am
Thanks for this page! It’s great! One thing not mentioned on the “Africa Stan”; even though it’s not a great Africa shape, it does have Madagascar, for extra points.
Comment by Pen — November 26, 2009 @ 4:16 am
14 looks just like Somalia, not New Zealand.
Comment by Ben — November 27, 2009 @ 8:43 am
[...] Accidental geography. [...]
Pingback by “Got UFO?” — November 27, 2009 @ 1:05 pm
the new jersy could could also be taken for centeral canda thougth hudson bay is a bit big and james bay to it south ia bit small. and ontario is acutally cut off from estern quebec the part that is taken by the original seer as new jersy.
Comment by alexis despland — November 27, 2009 @ 9:04 pm
very nice. I think you these pictures usually come by accident, what makes them so rare. Actually, the world closer to us than we think. visit: http://mapofyouridentity.wordpress.com for more information
Comment by Johan Huijbregts — November 28, 2009 @ 10:04 am
Squagellan is uncannily similar to South America. Not only is the shape just right, you even have the teethmarks above the Caribbean coast, which might be Grenada, Trinidad & Tobago, etc. The seam down the middle might also be a (somewhat out of place) representation of the Andes.
Comment by wilson — November 28, 2009 @ 5:07 pm
Also, the first thing I thought of when I saw Rustralia is actually “Batman”!
Comment by wilson — November 28, 2009 @ 5:08 pm
Frank,
I thought you might find this map interesting. It is on the NYTimes.
Comment by sarah m — November 29, 2009 @ 4:29 am
[...] Accidental Geography, the Long-Overdue Sequel Coincidental map of Australia or excellent Photoshopping? [...]
Pingback by Accidental Geography | Geo Lounge – All things geography — November 29, 2009 @ 4:30 am
@Ben, You have a point there.
Comment by Duboi — November 29, 2009 @ 12:49 pm
Actually, #1 looks more like East Germany and #13 is a sideways Iceland.
Comment by Juan — November 29, 2009 @ 5:41 pm
I feel like rain man…
Comment by lp — November 29, 2009 @ 7:44 pm
[...] cool blog Strange Maps (how have a only just discovered this? Brilliant!) just added a post on Accidental Geography documents a few miracles of unexpected cartography– from this awesomely patriotic steak to [...]
Pingback by Map Miracles: Just as good as Jesus on Toast! « How It Works — November 30, 2009 @ 3:17 am
of course, Bruce McCall has already demonstrated that all meat looks like South America.
http://www.amazon.com/Meat-Looks-Like-South-America/dp/0609608029
Comment by neil — November 30, 2009 @ 6:29 pm
This comment sponsored by BC BUD! I saw the island of Montreal in my oatmeal.
Comment by Miguel — December 1, 2009 @ 3:24 am
I would think that, by your definition of cartocacoethes (“the uncontrollable urge to see maps in everyday, non-cartography-related objects”), we’re stretching things a bit with #7 & #12. The other entries show “accidental” maps that were not formed with the imagined area or outline in mind – the squirrel wasn’t thinking about creating a map of South America (#2), nor was the rust bound and determined to form into a questionable likeness of Australia (#4). The natural/organic randomness of these maps is what makes them special and unique – anyone can make a DC cookie cutter (my wife has all 50 states & DC in the collection), or trim a steak into the shape of the USA. Perhaps some recognition of this accidental/organic/not-on-purpose nature should be incorporated into a new definition of cartocacoethes.
Comment by Big C — December 1, 2009 @ 8:16 pm
Incredible and wonderful. Thank you Strange Maps. Another winner. http://blackwatertown.wordpress.com/
Comment by blackwatertown — December 2, 2009 @ 1:55 am
Oh for crying out loud, stop it already. This blog used to be interesting, when the entries were about MAPS. Now it’s just one picture of a random blob after another. So long.
Comment by Rob — December 3, 2009 @ 8:33 pm
hey Rob (above), i’m really sad to hear your day was spoiled by this post.
personally, it made my day seeing my entry and everyone else’s. :)
thanks to strangemaps for continuing to post such wonderful, diverse and interesting content.
Comment by Alan Dow — December 3, 2009 @ 11:14 pm
I have one, I have one!
South America in a strawberry:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bzms/2617357876/
Comment by bazu — December 4, 2009 @ 9:03 pm
Wow this is insane ahah! my professor talked about this site in his lecture. The pumpkin one looks like it has the amazon river flowing through it as well.
greetings from waterloo!
Comment by Harrison — December 5, 2009 @ 9:17 pm
[...] Accidental geography. For people who see maps in the unlikeliest places. [...]
Pingback by chewing pixels » The Week in Links #27 — December 5, 2009 @ 10:52 pm
[...] Strange Maps is the place to discover stains, bite marks, rust and clouds in the shape of countries, states and [...]
Pingback by These are what you were looking for « Blackwatertown — December 6, 2009 @ 3:58 pm
Australia Chinese Restaurant Guide
http://aufood.net
Come and Rank your restaurant NOW!
Comment by Australia Chinese Restaurant Guide — December 8, 2009 @ 9:26 am
>>Jim sent in this picture of a cloud-lookalike of New Jersey, with the state’s two interlocking shapes of North Jersey and South Jersey easily recognisable. However, the state is tilted too much towards the left.
The clouds are right. Politically speaking, New Jersey does tilt too much to the left.
Comment by TRD — December 8, 2009 @ 7:27 pm
Well this happens sometimes coincidently we do something and that comes out to be some country’s map. Even while making chapati also sometimes we come up with many different maps
Comment by Mio Navman Spirit V505 — December 9, 2009 @ 6:20 am
Ludicrous: There are at least 3 species of tre squirrels in South America: (1) Amazon Dwarf Squirrel; (2) Northern Amazon Red Squirrel; (3) Southern Amazon Red Squirrel. Each of these have numerous subspecies.
Comment by HeavenlyJane — December 9, 2009 @ 6:19 pm
#11 Looks more like an upside-down Cyprus than a right-side-up United States.
Comment by Beau — December 9, 2009 @ 11:10 pm
Good work and nice post.Celebrities | Nature
Comment by Sunl — December 13, 2009 @ 3:55 am
These pics are awesome – especially #15 said as a kiwi
Comment by Jason — December 16, 2009 @ 12:09 pm
[...] seen at “Strange Maps“, photo taken in Costa Rica. Also featured are Mosstralia, Rustralia, Drown Under, [...]
Pingback by Land of the Long White Cloud « earth is my favourite planet — December 18, 2009 @ 12:39 am
#8 – Australia on the mud…http://roadbook.blogspot.com/2007/02/caprichos-geogrficos-da-me-natureza.html
Comment by Gonçalo Pais — November 23, 2009 @ 12:45 pm
As an Australian, I can attest that the flora in this photo is definitely Australian. It’s only right that the country (and its drivers) should produce the country’s own image.
Comment by AlanDownunder — December 20, 2009 @ 6:48 am
[...] coincidencias curiosas están bien documentadas en series fotográficas como las de Accidental Geography, en Strange Maps. [...]
Pingback by Geografía accidental | Vectoralia — January 5, 2010 @ 7:04 am
[...] Accidental Geography #2 There are some amazing coincidental geographical features to be found in everyday life. link [...]
Pingback by Accidental Geography #2 « Dakota East — January 8, 2010 @ 11:54 am
very funny and interesting ..you make me laugh.
Comment by dynn — January 10, 2010 @ 2:12 pm
I found Africa in Syracuse New York! http://thisworldaroundyou.wordpress.com/2009/11/15/i-found-africa-in-syracuse/
Comment by Stephanie — January 13, 2010 @ 10:43 pm
Thnks!!
Comment by tariely — January 15, 2010 @ 8:15 pm
where is no 5
Comment by Amir — February 4, 2010 @ 1:33 am
[...] Geografía accidental: colección de divertidas cartografías en los lugares más inesperados strangemaps.wordpress.com/2009/11/23/424-accidental-geograph… por jiajoe hace 3 segundos [...]
Pingback by Geografía accidental: colección de divertidas cartografías en los lugares más inesperados — February 9, 2010 @ 10:23 am