Star Trek Maps

Star Trek Maps is a reference work demonstrating the stellar cartography and navigation system featured on the Star Trek television series, written from an in-universe perspective. It was published by Bantam Books in August 1980, and licensed by Paramount Pictures.

Star Trek Maps
Box art
AuthorsJeffrey Maynard, John Upton, et al.
IllustratorsJeffrey Maynard, Michael McMaster, et al.
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction
PublisherBantam Books
Publication date
August 1980
Media typePrint
Pages31 pp., 4 maps
ISBN0-553-01202-9

The box set included four four-color wall maps, and an instructional booklet from the "Technical Publications Section" of Starfleet Command.

Production

A number of artists contributed to the production of the booklet, and wall maps. Many of the contributors would work on later Star Trek productions.

  • Jeffrey Maynard, Co-designer and coordinator.
  • Michael McMaster, Concept artist.
  • Geoffrey Mandel, Astronomical art design.
  • Lee Cole, Technical graphics.
  • Michael Nicastre and Rick Sternbach, Airbrush art.
  • John Upton, instruction manual author.

A number of the artists who worked on Star Trek Maps were involved with other Star Trek productions. Michael McMaster self-published blueprint of the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) as "Galactic Designs and Productions."[1] Geoffrey Mandel would later become a member of the art department for Star Trek Generations, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager. Lee Cole worked as a scenic artist and set designer for the un-produced Phase II television series, and he later joined the crews of Star Trek: The Motion Picture and The Wrath of Khan. Rick Sternbach was a production illustrator for The Motion Picture, and later for The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager. Larry Nemecek was an uncredited consultant.

Contents

Star Trek Maps box set contains four four-color wall maps, and a 31-page staple-bound booklet.[2]

  • Introduction to Navigation (booklet): Labelled with an in-universe document number: TM:3001499-03, as published by the Technical Publications Section of Starfleet Command. The text includes historical background, explanations of warp travel, navigation within the Federation, a briefing on course calculations, which include vector calculus, a table of corrections for warp speed designations.
  • Chart A  United Federation of Planets: The locations of the core Federation member worlds, and their relation to Earth. Sidebars include projections (called “Astrogation”) of the coordinate system for the galaxy explained in the booklet.
  • Chart B  Named Planets and their Primaries, and Planetary Descriptions: Positions of named planets from the television series using a galactic side view. Sidebars include vector drawings of Federation vessels and buoys, and two maps of member worlds more distant from the Federation core.
  • Chart C  Enterprise Zone of Patrol, Map Five: Depictions of several worlds featured in the television series. Included scaled maps of the Klingon Empire and an updated map of Earth Outpost Sector Z-6 featured in “Balance of Terror”. Sidebar featured planetary layouts of Sol, Triskelion, Talos, Deneb and Gamma Vertis systems.
  • Chart D  Enterprise Zone of Patrol, Map Six: Detailed map of the Rigel system, and depictions of twelve other named words, including Memory Alpha, Sherman’s Planet, Babel and Vulcan.

Reception

William A. Barton of The Space Gamer noted "Star Trek fans of Earth owe a vote of thanks to designer Jeffrey Maynard and to Bantam for taking the time to release these… They should prove a worthwhile purchase to anyone interested in the Star Trek universe."[2]

According to Memory Alpha, maps from the set were featured as part of the 1992 Star Trek exhibition presented by the National Air & Space Museum.

Larry Nemecek created a similarly in-depth package of wall maps and encyclopedic booklet in Stellar Cartography: The Starfleet Reference Library (2013). The maps and text were updated by Nemecek to include information from other Star Trek spin-off series, and films released since 1980, combined with material he contributed to Star Trek: Star Charts (2002).

gollark: An interesting thing about Unicode is that some stuff can go right-to-left, which is one reason why text rendering is insanely complex now.
gollark: I put in the character you used, ٴ, and it's apparently ARABIC LETTER HIGH HAMZA.
gollark: Possibly?
gollark: Those are diacritics, which modify previous characters.
gollark: Presumably just a weird Unicode quirk. There are lots of oddly rendered symbols, which is why I can do this: a̎ͤ͜l̘̙͗ĺ̮̬ ̯ͣ͝h̢ͣ̂aͫ͞͞i͔͋͡l̖ͤ͘ ̸͈͐҉̺̔͟t̑ͤ̓h̶̷ͤe̼̩̰ ͥ̓͡ũ̬̝ǹ̲͖iͥ̕ͅc̅ͫ͜ōͤ̀d̠͛́e̫ͦ̂ ̸̵̕c̰̩͉o̢͔͞n͓̙̉ṡ͈̈́o̺ͦ̉r̶͋͊t͐͗͑i̥͉͑u̶͇̓m̼͈ͣ.̲͝͝

References

  1. Bernard-Guignard (2013-09-08). "Hard Copy Blueprint Listing - Treknographics101". www.tapatalk.com. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
  2. Barton, William A. (Dec 1980). Johnson, Forrest (ed.). "Capsule Reviews". Reviews. The Space Gamer. No. 34. Austin, Texas: The Space Gamer. p. 34. ISSN 0194-9977.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.