Big Think
bigthink.com › strange-maps › null-island
Welcome to Null Island, where lost data goes to die - Big Think
October 5, 2023 - Null Island is located at the intersection of the Earth’s two main geodetic baselines, the prime meridian and the equator.(Credit: Google Earth / Ruland Kolen)
cartographical marker at 0°N, 0°E
Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Null_Island
Null Island - Wikipedia
4 days ago - Natural Earth describes the entity as a "1 meter square island" (11 sq ft) with "scale rank 100, indicating it should never be shown in mapping". The name "Null" refers to the two zero coordinates, as null values (indicating an absence of data) are often coerced to a value of 0 when converted to an integer context or "no-nulls allowed" context.
So i was looking at google earth and zoomed into where the fictional 'null island' would be and found this, what is it? It looks to me like a volcano but i can't be sure and wanted an actual answer
I also found this, and noticed that it's about 1.8 km elevated above everything nearby More on reddit.com
Null Island - Google Maps Community
Skip to main content · Google Maps Help · Sign in · Google Help · Help Center · Community · Google Maps · Terms of Service · Submit feedback · Send feedback on More on support.google.com
At the point on Earth's surface at 0° latitude and 0° longitude (0°N 0°E, or in the Gulf of Guinea), there, there is a location called "Null Island," but there's no actual island. The location is marked by a permanently-moored weather buoy.
I love this stuff. Human exploration at its finest. "Look, 0-0-0! Let's put a buoy here". 👌 More on reddit.com
Null Island
I feel like it’s a rite of passage that every GIS person goes through, and if you haven’t yet, your day will come. More on reddit.com
Cultura Colectiva
culturacolectiva.com › inicio › technology › null island: the island that doesn’t exist but lives on maps
Null Island: the island that doesn’t exist but lives on maps - Cultura Colectiva
March 18, 2023 - Still, the service will place you in a specific geographic position, an island known as Null Island. Mapping the entire Earth has been a challenge for those who generate geological maps; but with today’s technology, it is even possible to travel to any part of the planet, at least virtually. All you need is the exact coordinates and enter them into a geocoding search engine such as Google Earth or Bing Maps, and you’ll be looking at the geographic makeup of your destination.
Stamen
stamen.com › the-many-lives-of-null-island
The Many Lives of Null Island - Stamen Design
August 9, 2024 - The Myst-inspired version of Null Island isn’t the only Null Island that is experiencing geographic inflation! Not long after we included the first Null Island in the Acetate Map, a year later in 2011 an even smaller version, in the form of a 1 meter square, was added to version 1.3 of the Natural Earth dataset used by countless maps around the world.
CompleteEra
completeera.com › null-island-map-understanding-the-basics-2
Null Island Map: Understanding the Basics - CompleteEra
May 5, 2026 - Apps like Google Maps or Waze receiving invalid coordinates from users. Null Island forces developers to ask: *”Did the user input this correctly, or is this data garbage?”* It’s a simple but powerful way to validate geographic data before relying on it. Earth’s coordinates are defined ...
Google Support
support.google.com › maps › thread › 233061075 › null-island
Null Island - Google Maps Community
September 1, 2023 - Skip to main content · Google Maps Help · Sign in · Google Help · Help Center · Community · Google Maps · Terms of Service · Submit feedback · Send feedback on
The Map Room
maproomblog.com › 2016 › 02 › null-island
Null Island – The Map Room
Hence the invention of Null Island, an imaginary place to flag geocoding failures. It shows up in version 1.3 of Natural Earth, for example, as an island one square metre in size, but coded so that it would never appear in an actual map. Gary Vicchi explains Null Island in more detail.
Slashdot
developers.slashdot.org › story › 16 › 07 › 15 › 064248 › null-island-the-land-of-lousy-directional-data
Null Island: The Land of Lousy Directional Data - Slashdot
July 15, 2016 - By a programming quirk introduced by developers, those are the default coordinates where Google maps and other digital Global Positioning System applications are directed to send the millions of users who make mistakes in their searches. [About seven years ago, Mr. Kelso, who had heard the phrase used by other cartographers, encoded Null Island as the default destination for mistakes into a widely used public-domain digital-mapping data set called Natural Earth, which has been downloaded several million times.