Notes

WARNING: These notes make little sense if read sequentially, or in isolation from the entries on which they are a running commentary. Return to the entrie to get the context.

ITEM 1

The item itself is the chief source of information according to 3.0B2, which yields very little information in this case. This is an example of a map that provides an extreme paucity of information, and is often a test case of which information should be provided by the cataloguer when the item itself does not provide it.

The source of the title and statement of responsibility must be the chief source (3.0B3), in which no responsibility is supplied (unless Cornell be taken as the author, or publisher). It is taken here as the title, arguably its most likely status. There is no provision for creating a statement of responsibility if none is included on the item. For that reason alone, this map receives a title main entry. One should note, moreover, that the presumably responsible party (assuming this to be an official publication) is same as the title anyway. No responsibility indicated, since none is provided in chief source, and there is no provision for looking further.

The GMD is chosen from the American list of options in rule 1.1C1. "Map" doesn't quite fit, since this is an aerial view, not a map per se, but there is not other option, and "map" at least conveys the cartographic character of the work.

No edition statement is given, since none is provided in the chief source or accompanying material (none).

3.3B7. "Give a statement of scale for...bird's-eye views...only if the information appears on the item. If the item is not drawn to scale, give Not drawn to scale." We do not in fact know that this view is not drawn to scale, so prefer to use LC's phrase "scale not given," which is more accurate. The attached "statement of projection" (rule 3.3C1) should be supplied only if given by the item, its container, or accompanying printed material, and is not relevant to a "view" in any case, and is so omitted here. The optional "Statement of coordinates" (3.3D) optional, but should be used if at all possible, given the importance of this information for uniform retrieval. Nevertheless, the option is not generally exercised if the information is not easily available on the item or its accompanying material (Frost 41). I have not exercised the option here, since it would require some research to discover the coordinates of Cornell.

1.4C6 encourages the cataloguer to supply a probably place of publication even if none is given on the item.

No such encouragement is given to those who might wish to guess at the publisher.

A date is insisted on by 1.4F7, even a wild guess. Frost notes (p41) that certain information, such as dates of boundaries or base map, should not be used as the basis of dating publication according to CM. It is not clear whether that preclude dating this map from internal evidence--knowledge of the dates of construction of new Cornell buildings, for example. Such evidence was at any rate not used to any great extent in arriving at the guess "198-?". The map was acquired in 1989 and seemed new then.

"View" is a permissible SMD according to 3.5B1. Note that this is a black and white map, a fact that is not noted but is implied by silence on the issue. In a word, if there is no color, say nothing (3.5C3)

3.5D1 provides some very dense directions on dimensions. The first thing to remember is that so long as the map portion of the item is reasonably well bounded (as it is here, by a "neat line") the dimension to give is always that of the map, not of the sheet on which it is printed, and always in the order h x w.

The sheet size is sometimes added, on the basis of the instruction to give the sheet size as well as the map size if there is substantial additional information, e.g. text, present in the extra space (still in 3.5D1). Note that though this is a folded map, one should give the folded size only if the panel that appears on the outside when the map is folded is a cover, or bears a title, or is otherwise apparently intended to appear on the outside. Hence the information is here omitted.

This information is supplied as a "Nature and scope" note, rule 3.7B1.

This information on the relation of one map to another in the collection seemed worth recording, though it is not clear whether it is really an "Edition and history note" (3.7B7) or perhaps a "Physical description note" (3.7B10).

A Contents note (3.7B18). The notes thus follow in order of rules, as they should.

ITEM 2

For the form of this governmental corporate name, see rules 24.18A and 24.19A. (The latter, I think, forbids the form "United States. Army. Map Service," which would otherwise be reasonable.) Corporate-name main-entry is justified here on the basis of (1) a clear statement of authorial responsibility resting in the map service, (2) the knowledge that the Map Service was a genuine cartographic, not merely publishing, agency (see Frost, p45), and (3) the existence of rule 21.1B2 paragraph (f), which essentially accords cartographic materials a privileged laxity when it comes to the strict requirements otherwise imposed on corporate-name main entry: "cartographic materials emanating from a corporate body other than a body that is merely responsible for their publication or distribution. Many or most maps fall into this category.

Note that the map of Northeast China on the verso is ignored here (being relegated to a "with" note at the bottom of the record). I have taken advantage of the option under rule 3.1G1, that of making a separate description for each separately titled part if the cartographic item lacks a collective title.

Note that though there are Three dates given on the map, none is an edition statement named as such, so the edition statement is omitted. 1.2B3-4.

"Projection" is abbreviated as specified by 3.3C1; the scale statement is supplied by the map itself and thus may remain without brackets. The additional material on parallels is allowed but not required by 3.3C2. It might also have been placed in a note, or omitted altogether.

Coordinates are given as printed on the map. per 3.3D1, and in keeping with the L of C practice (Frost, 40-1).

Note that of the three dates on the map, only 1944 seems to be a publication date: 1943 is the date that map was compiled, 1944 apparently its publication date, and 1945, uncertainly, a revision date.

The rather odd word "Segments," required by 3.5B2, seems to denote portions of maps that may be assembled to create a complete one.

Under 3.5B4, an item described separately (because it lacks a collective title) but which is physically attached to another such item, as in the present case, must acknowledge the existence of this other by such strange locutions as "on 1 side of map" --thereby using "map" to mean "sheet" and "cartographic representation" in the same (as it were) descriptive sentence. The locution "on side 1" was chosen here over the alternative "on 1 side" on the grounds that the maps are sequentially numbered (though "34" and "35," not "1" and "2") and so the side bearing the map with the lower number might be construed as the first side. It is not clear if the rule was meant to be thus applied.

Color is required to be noted by 3.5C3. The material (Silk) is indicated if it is other than paper. Silk is in fact one of the AACR2 examples under rule 3.5C4.

"AAF cloth map" is here treated as important enough to qualify as "Series other info," rule 1.6D1, and is thus separated by a colon. For the lowercase abbreviated "no." see 1.6G1.

Notes are added as "Nature and scope note" (3.7B1), "Edition and history note" (3.7B7), "Publication/Distribution note" (3.7B9), and "With" note (3.7B21) respectively.

ITEM 3

This item offers two problems at the outset: what is the title? and what is the main entry? In the event, I have given them both the same answer and made this a title entry, but neither question has an entirely clearcut answer. The problem with making this a corporate-name main entry is that it is difficult to know which agency is responsible: MTA? NYTA? Neither is known as a mapping agency, but then, this is not the sort of map that a mapping agency would produce. Use of the title main entry with this particular title in fact produces both organization names in the title. But is this the right title. There is an alternative, appearing on the front panel, and incidentally therefore also within one of the maps, namely "NY Subway Guide." Both titles are informative as to area and subject, so the choice comes down to location. According to the table reproduced by Frost, p. 36, from CM, the title from within the neat line beats the panel title by a nose, despite the fulsome nature of the former in this case.

The copyright attribution to the NY Transit Authority, though it may reflect some level of responsibiity, is not really a statement of responsibility. It is taken here instead as an indicator of publisher.

"Not drawn to scale" should be reserved for items which really are not drawn to scale, or for which scale information is wholly inappropriate. As a schematic of subway routes with little or no connection with geographic reality, this item probably qualifies as having a "nonlinear scale" or none at all (3.3B7).

The date of the named revision should be given as the publication date (1.4F3) and no other.

3.5B2: "If there is more than one map, etc., on one or more sheets, specify the number of maps, etc., and the number of sheets."

Since there are exactly two maps, one must give the dimensions of both; if there were three or more, "give the greatest height of any of them followed by the greatest width of any of them and 'or smaller'" (3.5D1).

The existence of the front panel designed to be prominent when the map is folded requires that a sheet and folded sheet size be given (3.5D1).

"Panel title" is one of the examples specifically given by AACR2 as a possible "variation in title" note in rule 3.7B4. The other notes are the expected history note ("first edition...") (3.7B7) and contents note ("On verso...") (3.7B18).

ITEM 4

No question of title choice arises: the front panel title is the only one available. Similarly, this is a rare case of a map with personal authorship explicitly stated in the chief source and described to boot.

3.2C1 and 1.2C and 3.1F require inclusion of statements of responsibility relating to the edition, but not to all editions. This seems to qualify, though the extent to which surveying (information gathering) qualifies as cartographic responsibility is questionable. It has been considered to qualify in some rules.(AACR1 211B)

3.3B1 requires that statements or diagrammatic representations of scale on a map be translated into the the ISBD(CM) standard form "1:nnnnn." In this case, one conversion is that of a bar scale (labeled therefore as "ca."), the other stated as a ratio ("2-1/2 inches to one mile"). The latter is of course that of the standard British 2-1/2 inch series (1:25000), so no great calculation was necessary.

Coordinates. In this case I have supplied coordinates, despite the lack of any mention of them on the map itself, since they are still readily available, at least roughly, by recourse to the British National Grid references with which the map is equipped: these are almost directly convertible into Latitude and Longitude.

Complete a place name if given by source in abbreviated form (1.4C4).

I have excluded a certain overlap when adding together the sizes of the two halves of map (which is divided onto the two sides of the sheet) to arrive at the overall measurement. The requirement to arrive at the overall measurement of segments assembled together is contained in the third paragraph of 3.5D1.

3.7B14 recommends an "intended audience" note if stated on the item. It is.

ITEM 5

Though there is something like an edition statement on the item, "c1993 edition 5" is obscure, probably meaning the fifth printing of 1993 rather than indicating a named edition. Ignore.

Use copyright date in publication statement per 1.4F.

In the physical description, atlases borrow some features from book cataloging, e.g. pagination, per rules 3.5B3 and 2.5B, number of maps (rule 3.5C2), and height-only dimension (rule 3.5D2). I have not included a series statement here, since the existence of other A-Z Street Atlases probably does not qualify them as a series worth reporting.

ITEM 6

Coordinate data of this specificity actually supplied on map, hence reproduced in the record, per example in 3.3D1.

Since most maps are published in sets or series, the most pressing problem facing many map cataloguers is whether in any given case to catalogue the maps or the series (or both). In this case, a very popular and wellknown series, most libraries that had any of them would likely have the whole comprehensive series and would therefore catalogue it as a series, though each map stands alone and could be catalogued separately. AACR2r notes the problem in 3.0J1 but offers no guidance on solving it. CM is said to do better. I have arbitrarily dealt only with single-item cataloging here, and treat this example that way.

ITEM 7

"MapEasy" seems to be a company in the business of making maps, justifying corporate-name main entry under 21.1B2(f).

"Scales vary." It is not in fact clear that the maps on this sheet are drawn to scale at all, in which case "not drawn to scale" would be more appropriate; or whether comparing the maps to others would allow one to arrive at a scale or not (if not, "scale indeterminable" would be appropriate). Fortunately, there are enough maps and varied enough maps in this collection to invoke rule 3.3B5 "If the description is of a multipart item with three or more scales, give 'scales vary.'

3.5D1 again: "If the maps...are of more than two sizes, give the greatest heigh of any of them followed by the greatest width of any of them and 'or smaller.'"

ITEM 8

I have again adopted the option of giving a full rather than an abbreviated statement of projection information, per 3.3C2. AS instructed, parentheses are changed to commas, "proj." abbreviated and "two" changed to "2."

The coordinates are taken directly from map, but are not precise.

Note the mixture of dates on material: c1965 on map, c1966 on book, rpt. with corrections 1974 on book. Take the first as from chief source. rpt. date is not date of named edition and can be ignored except in a note. The trick to dealing with a map with such abundant auxiliary material as this one is to remember that the map itself is always the preferred chief source (sometimes the only allowable source) of information, the additional material only a secondaray source (3.0B2).

The only substantial change required in moving from a single-sheet map to a map that like this one is supplied with abundant documentation, is the need to supply descriptive details on volumes, pages, and sizes in the manner used with books (3.5E1 and 1.5E for details).


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