matthew.hampton (@cascadecarto) 's Twitter Profile
matthew.hampton

@cascadecarto

I am where I am. Deep Creek, Clackamas, Willamette, and Columbia Rivers. Cartographer, geospatial explorer, grounded in history, forward-focused.

ID: 906459476

calendar_today26-10-2012 17:47:09

781 Tweet

403 Followers

289 Following

matthew.hampton (@cascadecarto) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Portland’s Biketown e-bike rental program expands service into North, east Portland neighborhoods oregonlive.com/commuting/2022…

BikePortland (@bikeportland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Check out some of the regional active transportation projects cities in the Portland area are asking Metro to help fund in 2025-2027: bikeportland.org/2022/03/21/hey…

NACIS (@nacis) 's Twitter Profile Photo

📢 Attention all map makers!! We are excited to formally announce our 2022 conference!! The meeting will be held Oct. 19–22 in downtown Minneapolis. Visit nacis.org/2022 to submit an abstract, apply for a travel grant, and book your hotel room. #nacis2022

📢 Attention all map makers!! 

We are excited to formally announce our 2022 conference!!

The meeting will be held Oct. 19–22 in downtown Minneapolis. Visit nacis.org/2022 to submit an abstract, apply for a travel grant, and book your hotel room. #nacis2022
Massimo (@rainmaker1973) 's Twitter Profile Photo

There are 12 black dots at intersections in this image. Your brain won’t let you see them all at once. Here's why [read more: bit.ly/2qxnuj5]

There are 12 black dots at intersections in this image. Your brain won’t let you see them all at once. Here's why [read more: bit.ly/2qxnuj5]
matthew.hampton (@cascadecarto) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Returning from #NACIS2022 filled with enthusiasm from being around so many talented cartographers. Excited for next year's conference in Pittsburgh, where I first animated an historic panoramic map using #aftereffects in 2014. nacis.org/wp-content/upl…

matthew.hampton (@cascadecarto) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Inspired by a post I didn't read by John Nelson, I wanted to wish you a Happy Halloween from Boring, Oregon just east of #Portland. The Eduard was given an inverted Inferno tint from Matplotlib in #ArcGISPro to catch the SE-facing lava domes. BoringMaps #3d #esri

Inspired by a post I didn't read by <a href="/John_M_Nelson/">John Nelson</a>, I wanted to wish you a Happy Halloween from Boring, Oregon just east of #Portland. The <a href="/EduardShading/">Eduard</a>  was given an inverted Inferno tint from Matplotlib in #ArcGISPro to catch the SE-facing lava domes. <a href="/BoringMaps/">BoringMaps</a> #3d #esri
Historic Vids (@historyinmemes) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A family poses in front of a 1,341 year old Sequoia tree nicknamed "Mark Twain" that was felled in 1892 after a team of two men spent 13 days sawing it in the Pacific Northwest. The giant tree was 331 feet tall (100 meters).

A family poses in front of a 1,341 year old Sequoia tree nicknamed "Mark Twain" that was felled in 1892 after a team of two men spent 13 days sawing it in the Pacific Northwest. The giant tree was 331 feet tall (100 meters).
Massimo (@rainmaker1973) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In this 2017 marketing stunt, Michael Guerra shows how adopting this definitely unconventional position may result is an efficient aerodynamics vs the other cyclists This is the physics behind it: buff.ly/338WcmN [video: buff.ly/3k9gWqE]

David Rumsey (@davidrumseymaps) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The beautiful cartography of Eduard Imhof created for a Swiss middle school atlas - "Schweizerischer Mittelschulatlas herausgegeben von der Konferenz der kantonalen Erziehungsdirektoren. Fünfzehnte Auflage, 1969." davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/s…

The beautiful cartography of Eduard Imhof created for a Swiss middle school atlas - "Schweizerischer Mittelschulatlas herausgegeben von der Konferenz der kantonalen Erziehungsdirektoren. Fünfzehnte Auflage, 1969."
davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/s…
Massimo (@rainmaker1973) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Over 40 years ago, designer Peter Saville crafted the album cover for Joy Division’s Unknown Pleasures, lifting the image verbatim from a science book depicting the very first reading of a pulsar from 1967, CP 1919 [read more: ow.ly/8mQW30q6CCr]