A wonderful example of differing scales - undisclosed - is this 1927 Canadian National Railways map, "Triangle Tour of British Columbia." As Jeffrey Murray described it:

"This map uses two different scales, but provides no indication as to what they are or where they meet. The eastern half of the map shows Jasper National Park (the home of Jasper Park Lodge, which is owned by the railway) and the northern half of Banff National Park as far south as Bow Lake, a few miles west of Calgary. The western half of the map, on the other hand, shows the entire British Columbian coast, from Prince Rupert in the north to Vancouver and the American border in the south. In other words, the mapmaker has eliminated the entire southeastern corner of British Columbia and adjacent Alberta, and filled it in with an enlarged map of the central portion of the Rocky Mountains. In doing so, the mapmaker completely eliminated its major competitor, the Canadian Pacific Railway and its hotel at Lake Louise. The map suggests that the only way for a visitor to travel the mountains and waters of British Columbia is to take one of the trains or steamers operated by Canadian National Railways." Tale From the Map Vault (Answer 8).

PJ Mode

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On Thu, Aug 2, 2018 at 11:21 AM, Angela R Cope <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Will anyone share examples of maps that depict variable scale across a single map? I have one - Baltimore by Horn-Shafer Co. and Baltimore Area Convention and Visitors Council 1967 (oclc 30570294)

But I know there are many European cities that depict scale in this way.

Cataloger's Desktop definition: A scale designation for a resource whose scale is variable across the resource, when the range of values cannot be determined.

Thanks in advance.

Angie