Gall Stereographic
The Gall Stereographic projection is a cylindrical perspective projection that is neither conformal nor equal area. It is produced geometrically by projecting the Earth perspectively from the point on the Equator opposite a specified meridian, onto a secant cylinder cutting the globe at latitudes 45° N and S. It was presented by James Gall in 1855. It is sometimes known simply as the Gall projection, or as Gall’s Stereographic projection. This projection is used primarily for world maps in British atlases and some other atlases. It resembles the Mercator, but has less distortion of scale and area near the poles.
The meridians in the Gall Stereographic projection are equally spaced straight parallel lines .77 as long as the Equator. Parallels are unequally spaced straight parallel lines perpendicular to meridians. The poles are represented by straight lines equal in length to the Equator. The projection is symmetrical about any meridian or the Equator. Scale is true along latitudes 45° N and S in all directions, and is constant in any given direction along any other latitude. There is no distortion at latitudes 45° N and S, but shape, area and scale distortion increase moderately away from these latitudes and become severe at the poles.
The "Gall Stereographic" projection has the following parameters:
Note: Only a spherical form of this projection is used. The semi-major axis of the ellipsoid will be used as the radius of the sphere.