George F. Jenks was a 20th-century American
cartographer. Graduating with his Ph.D. in agricultural geography from
Syracuse University in 1947, Jenks began his career under the tutelage of
Richard Harrison, cartographer for
Time and
Fortune magazine. He joined the faculty of the
University of Kansas in 1949 and began to build the cartography program. During his 37-year tenure at KU, Jenks developed the Cartography program into one of three programs renowned for their graduate education in the field; the others being the
University of Wisconsin and the
University of Washington. Much of his time was spent developing and promoting improved cartographic training techniques and programs. He also spent significant time investigating three-dimensional maps, eye-movement research,
thematic map communication, and
geostatistics. Jenks was a cartographer by profession. His work with
statistics grew out of a desire to make
choropleth maps more visually accurate for the viewer. In his paper,
The Data Model Concept in Statistical Mapping, he claims that by visualizing data in a three dimensional model cartographers could devise a “systematic and rational method for preparing choroplethic maps”. Jenks used the analogy of a “blanket of error” to describe the need to use elements other than the mean to generalize data. The three dimensional models were created to help Jenks visualize the difference between data classes. His aim was to generalize the data using as few planes as possible and maintain a constant “blanket of error”. ==Description of method==