Calling all map enthusiasts: the North American Cartographic Information Society will soon be releasing the 2018 Atlas of Design, its latest compendium of the world’s newest and best maps. Every two years since 2012, NACIS, a nonprofit organization that supports and promotes cartography, has released a new volume of maps, carefully selected from hundreds of entrants by a panel of judges. This year reveals a bumper crop of map-makers: NACIS received over 300 submissions for just 32 spots.

The entrants were judged by a panel of 12 and Lauren Tierney, who co-edited the Atlas of Design along with Alethea Steingisser and Caroline Rose, acknowledges a healthy divergence of views. “We don’t believe there’s any way to really be objective about something like this,” she says. “The judges were often in disagreement; almost every map was scored well by at least one judge and poorly by another. This disagreement was exactly our goal in bringing the panel together, because our aim was to ensure that the final selection was not dominated by one style or taste, but held something for everyone.”

Eastern Pacific Ring of Fire, by John Nelson, showing the boundaries of the Earth’s tectonic plates.

While the editors of the latest edition of the Atlas of Design don’t identify any dominant trends in cartography over the past few years, “new techniques and cartographic designs emerge that are incredibly varied and different than the last year. As different techniques become popular in the field, they emerge in some of the entries we received.”

One vertical map depicts the boundaries of the Earth’s tectonic plates in startling, luminous colors. Another shows the life of a king eider sea duck. Another, by Heather Smith, is in the style of a 19th-century strip map: it depicts the Annapolis river, and runs six-feet long.

Glacial Landforms of the Puget Lowland, by Daniel Coe of the Washington Geological Survey, “explain many of the fascinating landforms that the Puget Lobe of the Cordilleran ice sheet left behind in the Puget Lowland region of Washington. “

“The Atlas aims to inspire readers both within the field of cartography and without toward new understandings of design, and of the power that a well-crafted map can have,” says Tierney. “In an age when more and more mapping tasks are being turned over to computers, the Atlas provides one more answer to the question: What do cartographers do?”

Atlas Obscura has a selection of images from the upcoming fourth edition of the Atlas of Design, which will be released in October 2018; pre-orders are available until September 15, 2018.

The six-foot long map Annapolis River, by Heather Smith, “was carved on cherry wood and printed by hand on Japanese paper using oil based ink.”

What if It Was Your City, by Alberto Lucas López, was first published in Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post to mark the the 70 year anniversary of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombs.