cartographions
Cartographions are a theoretical unit of geographic representation used in discussions of high-resolution cartography and spatial data modeling. The term blends cartography with the suffix -ion to denote a discrete element of a map or spatial data structure. In this framework, a cartographion represents a defined geographic area and contains aggregated attributes describing terrain, land use, population, and other phenomena at a specified scale.
The concept emerged in scholarly debates about reconciling continuous spatial phenomena with discrete computational models. Cartographions
A cartographion comprises geometry, a set of attribute fields, and metadata about scale, projection, and temporal
In theory, cartographions enable flexible aggregation, dynamic resolution, and efficient spatial queries. They are discussed in
Critics note potential ambiguity in cell boundaries, data aggregation bias, and computational overhead for extremely large
Related concepts include tessellation, raster data, vector data, spatial index, and adaptive mesh.