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Gallery: Combination chart + Map

6 unique examples
Showing visual types:Combination chart Icon for removing this tag Icon for how to create this kind of visualisationMap Icon for removing this tag

How to create your own

Create your own: combination chart

  • Some combination charts, such as bar and line charts, can be created in standard applications such as Excel (using more than one axis). Others can be combined by saving visualisations as image files and combining in an image editor.

Flow map showing US and China imports and exports

Screenshot for 'Flow map showing US and China imports and exports'
Flow map showing US and China imports and exports.
Average rating: 6 (10 votes)

Geographic cluster analysis

Screenshot for 'Geographic cluster analysis'
This chart is designed to aid the interpretation of the results of a cluster analysis, a statistical technique used to discover the underlying structure of a set of observations. The data set contains dummy variables.
Unrated

Interactive dashboard of UK fatalities in Afghanistan and Iraq

Screenshot for 'Interactive dashboard of UK fatalities in Afghanistan and Iraq'
An interactive dashboard, showing UK fatalities in Afghanistan and Iraq. Users can change the timeframe to explore changes over time.
Average rating: 10 (1 votes)

Interactive shaded map

Screenshot for 'Interactive shaded map'
This is an interactive visualisation that allows the ranked display of information for most countries in the world on three dimensions: health, living standard and education. The data displayed is available through the United Nations Development Programme and goes from 2003 to 2008.
Average rating: 9.3 (3 votes)

Map (multi layer): Ageing population

Screenshot for 'Map (multi layer): Ageing population'
Map showing population trends and change in the old age population. To compare both impacts of population growth and aging population.
Unrated

Population projection

Screenshot for 'Population projection'
This is a very rich infographic that combines several visualisation types: bubble chart, population pyramid, comparative line charts, a map, pie charts and it is additionally fully annotated. The picture itself is crossed by a line (without reference axis) that communicates the main message of the infographic: the rapid population growth experienced by the UK in recent decades. The supplementary charts display information about population proportions, population densities, age and gender structure, comparison between migration related and “natural” population change, fertility rates during the last 35 years and lastly population changes by government region during 2007-08. The display is very rich and is successful at grabbing’s the reader’s attention by offering an appealing combination of related data.
Average rating: 6 (3 votes)