• - Map with lost margin: completely partial map without margin so that the mapped space reaches the edge of the sheet.
• - Current map: map that represents the most recent topographical and geographic data.
• - Administrative map: map that represents the main facts of the administrative organization of a territory, especially issues related to borders, divisions and capitals.
• - Analytical map: thematic map that represents the elements of a phenomenon.
• - Anamorphic map: map in which the territories are modified so that their surfaces are proportional to the magnitudes of a phenomenon that is to be represented, ensuring that the contiguity and configurations of the territories are maintained.
• - Auxiliary map: map attached to another that complements it. Note: It is usually located on the same sheet and is usually represented on a different scale, which is generally smaller.
- Adjacent auxiliary map: auxiliary map that represents, generally at the same scale, an area bordering that of the main map.
• - Bathymetric map: hydrographic map that represents the relief of submerged areas.
• - Base map: map reproduced totally or partially in one or more colors that serves to superimpose thematic data on it.
• - Base map: initial map resulting from a topographic or photogrammetric survey. For example: the state topographic map. Generally it is a large-scale official document from which the rest of the maps are subsequently formed. It is an opposite concept to the derived map.
• - Cadastral map: map that represents the boundaries of land ownership. Complementary synonym: cadastral plan.
• - Key map: See: index map.
• - Continental map: map that represents an entire continent, normally at a scale between 1:20,000,000 and 1:50,000,000.
• - Chorochromatic map: map in which qualitatively different areas are marked using hatches or colors.
• - Chorographic map: topographic map prepared on a scale small enough to be able to represent large groups of the territory of a region, a set of regions or a continent.
• - Choropleth map: thematic map that represents the spatial distribution of a phenomenon through plots or different shades of color or gray, in which the gradation of intensity expresses different intervals of a phenomenon in territorial, administrative or conventional units.[1].
• - Current map: map that represents the speed and direction of ocean currents.
• - Elevation map: See: elevation sheet.
• - Grid Map: A map that has a grid overlaid or indicated in its frame.
• - Map of bathymetric curves: bathymetric map that represents the relief of underwater depths through the use of isobaths.
• - Contour map: map that represents relief using contour lines.
• - Qualitative map: thematic map that represents the distribution of phenomena according to their nominal or conceptual character.
• - Quantitative map: thematic map that represents the distribution of phenomena and facts according to their numerical importance expressed absolutely or relatively. They usually have a legend.
• - Dasymmetric map: choropleth map in which statistical areas are subdivided into areas of relative homogeneity based on complementary information. Note: This is a map used primarily to represent population densities.
• - Road map: map that fundamentally represents the roads, which are classified into categories according to their road importance.
• - Star map: planisphere that represents the surface of a star-shaped globe. In this type of map, the projection has been made based on two different mathematical definitions, which are usually one for the central part and the other for the tips of the star.
• - Railway map: itinerary map that represents the railway network, stations and stops and railway infrastructure or that are of interest to users.
• - Flow map: thematic map that represents the directions of movement through lines of variable width, proportional to their importance and schematized according to the layout. Complementary synonym: flow line map. It provides complex data through lines that begin and arrive at specific places. It is a type of complex map due to the volume of information, the way it is presented and the different relationships that can be established.
• - Strip map: thematic map in which the surface of each territorial unit has been divided into parallel strips with a surface proportional to the sectoral values of the phenomenon represented.
• - Frequency map: thematic map that represents the number of times that an event or phenomenon occurs in a specific area or place.
• - Zone map: map that represents its field by means of zones that are normally joined at the points of the equator or at the poles.
• - Map of time zones: planisphere that represents the time zones.
• - Intensity map: thematic map that represents the phenomena according to the degree of strength or activity.
• - Isopleth map: map that represents the variations of a phenomenon through the use of isopleths.
• - Map of the Moon: map that represents the surface of the Moon.
• - Line map: map that has its graphic representation made of lines.
• - Airline map: itinerary map that represents the routes of regular airlines.
• - Flow line map: See: flow map.
• - Map of maritime navigation lines: itinerary map that represents regular maritime routes and, often, also river routes.
• - Mercator map: map established in the Mercator projection.
• - Map of normals: map that represents a relief using normals.
• - Orientation map: map that represents selected topographic elements in order to be able to make a quick and easy interpretation of the location itself and other significant elements or places. It is used to be able to follow a route.
• - Slope map: thematic map that, using any graphic system, represents the different degrees of slope of a territory.
• - Forecast map: map that represents the situation or probable evolution of the phenomena determined for a future period or date.
• - Point map: quantitative thematic map in which the distribution of an object or phenomenon is represented by points.
• - Situation map: map, generally on a small scale, that indicates the location of an area or a cartographic sheet within a larger territory.
• - Surface map: See: surface weather map.
• - Bathymetric ink map: bathymetric map that represents the submerged areas using different color gradations.
• - Hypsometric ink map: topographic map that represents height through different color gradations.
• - Relative topography map: weather map that represents the thickness or altitude differences between two pressure levels.
• - Map of the sky: See: Celestial planisphere.
• - World map: map that represents all or a good part of the earth's surface.
• - Relief map: orographic map that represents the relief using various methods that normally have a plastic effect.
• - Weather map: map that represents the values of some meteorological elements, especially pressure, atmospheric phenomena and fronts at a given time.
- Altitude time map: time map that represents, through isohypses, the heights at which there is a certain pressure and, through isotherms, the temperatures at these heights.
- Surface weather map: weather map that basically represents surface pressures reduced to sea level, using isobars, with their value and the symbol of the main configurations and fronts.
• - Densimetric map: thematic map that represents the distribution of a fact or phenomenon with quantitative data referring to a surface unit.
• - Derived map: map that has been obtained from a map considered as main, with or without reduction in scale, directly from one or more base maps or from other derived maps. Note: it is an opposite concept to the basemap.
• - Diagrammatic map: See: cartodiagram.
- Bar diagrammatic map: thematic map that represents a fact or phenomenon distributed territorially by means of one or more height bars, these being proportional to the value to be represented.
- Diagrammatic map of squares: thematic map that represents the surface of each territorial unit divided into squares that are covered with different patterns or colors, in such a way that the number of squares of each type is proportional to the partial values of the phenomena represented.
• - Didactic map: map prepared for instructional purposes.
• - Dynamic map: also known as map animation.
• - Black and white map: monochrome map that has been printed in black, or gray values, on a white background.
• - Map in the text: map printed in the body of a text, an article or a book. Note: It is an opposite concept to the out-of-text map.
• - Map in gray: monochrome map printed in soft gray, using color as both a background and a working base.
• - Perspective map: map in which a perspective has been used to represent a territory.
• - Relief map: topographic map made in three dimensions.
• - School map: educational map prepared and prepared to be used in schools.
• - Schematic map: map with a very simplified cartographic representation.
• - Statistical map: thematic map that represents statistical data, normally based on political and administrative territorial units.
• - Exaggerated map: map that represents certain phenomena in such a way that makes them acquire more importance than they really have.
• - Facsimile map: map that faithfully reproduces an old map.
• - Fantastic map: map that represents objects and phenomena that do not exist or that cannot be located in the form and characteristics in which they are expressed.
• - Phenological map: thematic map that represents the seasonal or periodic manifestations of living beings. Example: a map of whale migration.
• - Physical map: map, generally on a small scale, that represents the main physiographic features of a territory.
• - Physiographic map: morphographic map that represents the characteristics of the relief in broad strokes in a figurative and simplified way using an oblique perspective.
• - Map out of text: loose map that accompanies a text, a book or an article. Note: It is a term opposite to map in the text.
• - General map: map that represents a set of basic and diverse geographical phenomena such as coasts, hydrography, relief, towns, roads, administrative limits, toponymy, etc. Note: Large-scale general maps of land areas are often called topographic maps. Both are usually considered complementary and opposite to thematic maps.
• - Geological map: thematic map that represents the rocks and geological structures observable on the Earth's surface. The lithology and age of the rocks are represented coded by standardized colors and patterns. The symbology indicates the inclination of the layers, the axes of the folds, the faults, etc. They are usually accompanied by geological sections and stratigraphic columns.
• - Geomorphological map: thematic map that represents the relief forms according to their genesis, dimensions, types and their relationships with the structure and its dynamics. Complementary synonym: morphological map.
• - Geopolitical map: map that, through appropriate symbology, represents theories and facts of geopolitics.
• - Hydrographic map: map that fundamentally represents the courses of rivers and surfaces with water.
• - Hypsometric map: map that fundamentally represents the altitude of a territory.
• - Historical map: thematic map that represents historical events and phenomena.
• - Illustrated map: map in which drawings or photographs are used instead of cartographic symbols.
• - Incunabulum map: ancient map printed in the early days of the existence of the printing press.
• - Independent map: map that constitutes a bibliographic unit with a single topic or title.
• - Index map: general map where the different maps included in a series or atlas are schematically located and in which the page or location reference is indicated. Complementary synonym: Key map.
• - Interactive map: cartographic representation developed in computational environments that combines the map with the capacity for interactivity on it.
• - Inventory map: map that exhaustively represents the geographical distribution of a given phenomenon.
• - Itinerary map: map that represents the network of communication routes and in which the distances between the different key points are normally added.
• - Hieroglyphic map: map made in such a way that it is enigmatic and difficult to decipher.
• - Mental map: cartographic image of a territory, more or less distorted, that is held in thought.
• - Mining map: large-scale map that represents the location and extent of a mining exploitation area, describing both its external topographic forms and its underground structures. Note: Often a series of vertical slices or sections complete the cartographic information.
• - Monochrome map: map printed in a single color.
• - Municipal map: It is the map of a geographic region where a president or councilor exercises his government functions, dependent on a state, and this in turn of a country.
• - Morphographic map: thematic map that represents the shapes of a terrain according to its appearance.
• - Morphological map: See: geomorphological map.
• - Morphometric map: thematic map that represents the shapes of a relief in a quantitative way, either in absolute or relative values. Note: many slope maps are morphometric maps.
• - Wall map: large map that represents very useful generalized information and can be read from a certain distance.
• - Mute map: map that has no implementation or labeling (toponymy).
• - National map: map that represents a territory of a nation or a state, normally at a scale between 1:5,000,000 and 1:20,000,000.
• - Numeric map: digital image of a phenomenon or a geographical feature preserved on cartographic sheets, magnetic tapes, DVD-ROM or on another medium for computer processing.
• - Official map: map prepared by an official body.
• - Original map: map from which other maps are obtained. Note: in particular, maps obtained by representing original studies are considered original maps.
• - Orographic map: map that represents the physical configuration of a relief using hypsometric inks, shading or any other technique.
• - Pictorial map: map that represents topographical features, objects or phenomena using pictorial signs instead of using the usual conventional signs.
- Pictorial relief map: map that represents the relief and any other topographic feature in an approximate planimetric position using pictorial signs, which gives a sensation similar to that of an oblique perspective.
• - Planimetric map: topographic map in which the relief is not represented.
• - Folding map: map that can be folded to facilitate its conservation and consultation.
• - Pluviometric map: thematic map that represents the amount and distribution of rainfall in a territory and in a specific period of time.
• - Polychrome map: map printed in different colors.
• - Political map: map, generally on a small scale, that represents the political and administrative divisions of a territory that are normally differentiated using different inks for this.
• - Primitive map: map made before the first topographic surveys carried out systematically and with precision.
• - Main map: map that constitutes an essential element of a cartographic sheet and is usually complemented by one or more auxiliary maps.
• - Regional map: map that represents a region or a part of a territory at a scale normally between 1:1,000,000 and 1:5,000,000.
• - Synoptic map: thematic map that represents two or more types of phenomena in order to express their functional relationships. For example: a weather map.
• - Synthetic map: thematic map that, based on a precise objective, represents a phenomenon as a whole through its internal relationships.
• - Thematic map: map that, on an elementary topographic reference base, highlights, through the use of various resources of cartographic techniques, correlations, evaluations or distribution structures of a specific and specific topic. Note: conventionally the topographic map and all general cartography are considered complementary, even opposed to the thematic map.
• - Topographic map: map that represents the planimetry and altimetry of the shapes and dimensions of specific, fixed and durable elements of a specific area of the surface of a land.
• - National topographic map: topographic map, generally at a scale of 1:50000 or 1:25000, which serves as a base map of the territory of a nation or a state.
• - Transparent map: map printed on a transparent or translucent material that is superimposed on one or several maps that have the same field and scale with the main purpose of complementing the information.
• - Tourist map: map that includes useful information for tourism, related to the urban location and communication routes, highlighting points of historical interest, landscape, etc.
• - Urban map: map of a city.
• - Rural map: map that represents a rural area with little influence of technology.
• - Schematized map: in this type of map the known base representation is not used, but rather the information is schematized, as in this case, through different sizes of boxes or rectangles depending on the data and the proportion of information.