I am aware that the powerful package Basemap can be utilized to plot US map with state boundaries. I have adapted this example from Basemap GitHub repository to plot 48 states colored by their respective population density:
Now my question is: Is there a simple way to add Alaska and Hawaii to this map and place those at a custom location, e.g. bottom left corner? Something like this:
import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from mpl_toolkits.basemap import Basemap as Basemap
from matplotlib.colors import rgb2hex
from matplotlib.patches import Polygon
# Lambert Conformal map of lower 48 states.
m = Basemap(llcrnrlon=-119,llcrnrlat=22,urcrnrlon=-64,urcrnrlat=49,
projection='lcc',lat_1=33,lat_2=45,lon_0=-95)
# draw state boundaries.
# data from U.S Census Bureau
# http://www.census.gov/geo/www/cob/st2000.html
shp_info = m.readshapefile('st99_d00','states',drawbounds=True)
# population density by state from
# http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_by_population_density
popdensity = {
'New Jersey': 438.00,
'Rhode Island': 387.35,
'Massachusetts': 312.68,
'Connecticut': 271.40,
'Maryland': 209.23,
'New York': 155.18,
'Delaware': 154.87,
'Florida': 114.43,
'Ohio': 107.05,
'Pennsylvania': 105.80,
'Illinois': 86.27,
'California': 83.85,
'Hawaii': 72.83,
'Virginia': 69.03,
'Michigan': 67.55,
'Indiana': 65.46,
'North Carolina': 63.80,
'Georgia': 54.59,
'Tennessee': 53.29,
'New Hampshire': 53.20,
'South Carolina': 51.45,
'Louisiana': 39.61,
'Kentucky': 39.28,
'Wisconsin': 38.13,
'Washington': 34.20,
'Alabama': 33.84,
'Missouri': 31.36,
'Texas': 30.75,
'West Virginia': 29.00,
'Vermont': 25.41,
'Minnesota': 23.86,
'Mississippi': 23.42,
'Iowa': 20.22,
'Arkansas': 19.82,
'Oklahoma': 19.40,
'Arizona': 17.43,
'Colorado': 16.01,
'Maine': 15.95,
'Oregon': 13.76,
'Kansas': 12.69,
'Utah': 10.50,
'Nebraska': 8.60,
'Nevada': 7.03,
'Idaho': 6.04,
'New Mexico': 5.79,
'South Dakota': 3.84,
'North Dakota': 3.59,
'Montana': 2.39,
'Wyoming': 1.96,
'Alaska': 0.42}
# choose a color for each state based on population density.
colors={}
statenames=[]
cmap = plt.cm.hot # use 'hot' colormap
vmin = 0; vmax = 450 # set range.
for shapedict in m.states_info:
statename = shapedict['NAME']
# skip DC and Puerto Rico.
if statename not in ['District of Columbia','Puerto Rico']:
pop = popdensity[statename]
# calling colormap with value between 0 and 1 returns
# rgba value. Invert color range (hot colors are high
# population), take sqrt root to spread out colors more.
colors[statename] = cmap(1.-np.sqrt((pop-vmin)/(vmax-vmin)))[:3]
statenames.append(statename)
# cycle through state names, color each one.
ax = plt.gca() # get current axes instance
for nshape,seg in enumerate(m.states):
# skip DC and Puerto Rico.
if statenames[nshape] not in ['District of Columbia','Puerto Rico']:
color = rgb2hex(colors[statenames[nshape]])
poly = Polygon(seg,facecolor=color,edgecolor=color)
ax.add_patch(poly)
plt.title('Filling State Polygons by Population Density')
plt.show()
For anyone interested, I was able to fix it myself. The (x,y) coordinates of each segment (for Alaska and Hawaii) should be translated. I also scale down Alaska to 35% before translating it.
The second for-loop should be modified as following:
for nshape,seg in enumerate(m.states):
# skip DC and Puerto Rico.
if statenames[nshape] not in ['Puerto Rico', 'District of Columbia']:
# Offset Alaska and Hawaii to the lower-left corner.
if statenames[nshape] == 'Alaska':
# Alaska is too big. Scale it down to 35% first, then transate it.
seg = list(map(lambda (x,y): (0.35*x + 1100000, 0.35*y-1300000), seg))
if statenames[nshape] == 'Hawaii':
seg = list(map(lambda (x,y): (x + 5100000, y-900000), seg))
color = rgb2hex(colors[statenames[nshape]])
poly = Polygon(seg,facecolor=color,edgecolor=color)
ax.add_patch(poly)
Here is the new US map (using the 'Greens' colormap).