ie8 fix

Google Maps and the mystery of the non-existent town

By | November 4, 2009, 12:05pm PST

A small village in the north of England, Argleton, has been causing confusion with an air of mystery. The simple reason is, is that the village simply doesn’t exist except in the world of Google.

The above image is from Google Maps, displaying the village of Argleton, Lancashire, in the north of the UK.

The above image is from Bing Maps, displaying the exact same area but without any reference to Argleton in the map.

The above image is from the birds-eye view from Bing Maps, which shows an aerial, high-resolution image of the area, which I have stitched together (click to enlarge into full scale; warning: 7MB). As you can see, there is nothing but a load of fields and certainly no buildings, let alone a whole village in the area.

So why does Google display this village - which I’ll point out now, categorically does not exist - and other mapping services don’t?

Some believe that the added name is due to a measure to prevent copyright violations, but Tele Atlas provide the imaging and name data and have said they provide accurate information and Google deny that they have altered it in any way. It seems in this area, Google Maps is the looking glass to external information.

The local blogosphere is already taking advantage of this “Internet sensation” with this spoof site. Yet even after months of knowing about it plus users reporting it as an error, it still hasn’t disappeared — branding Google’s mapping service as potentially inaccurate.

Mike Nolan, head of web services at Edge Hill University, wrote:

“I grew up in the area and spotted on the map one day that it said ‘Argleton’,” he says. “But it’s just a farmer’s field close to the village hall and playing fields. I think a footpath goes across the field, but that’s all. The name ‘Argleton’ is similar to ‘Aughton’. Maybe someone made a mistake when keying in the name?”

Yet the president of the Society of Cartographers, Prof. Danny Dorling, suggested that perhaps this was an additional element to a map to hide secret locations, as some may well be forced to do.

The only thing I can think of, and after trying out the name in an anagram solver which provided little except slight amusement, is that it’s a tiny Easter egg which has taken all this time to discover.

What’s your theory? Surely it can’t be as crazy as, say, a fictional village existing only within the realms of Google, can it?

Kick off your day with ZDNet's daily e-mail newsletter. It's the freshest tech news and opinion, served hot. Get it.

Topics

Zack Whittaker, a criminologist who studied at the University of Kent, Canterbury, is a journalist, writer and broadcaster.

Disclosure

Zack Whittaker

I worked briefly with Microsoft UK in 2006 but no longer have any connection with the company. Regardless, I remain impartial and unbiased in my views.

I don't hold any stock or shares, investments or industrial secrets in any company, but have signed confidentiality agreements with a number of UK and U.S. organisations, whose names I am not at liberty to disclose.

I was involved with Kent Union, the University of Kent's student union, undertaking voluntary, non-salaried, elected positions between early 2009 and mid-2010.

No other company, body, government department, non-governmental organisation or third sector organisation employs me or pays me a salary in any capacity whatsoever.

As a freelance journalist, whenever expenses are given and taken by a company that is not CBS Interactive, these will be disclosed in each relevant post to ensure transparency.

I currently work with a UK law enforcement unit, but this is an entirely separate position which bears no connection to other work.

(Updated: 23rd October 2011)

Biography

Zack Whittaker

Zack Whittaker, criminologist who studied at the University of Kent, UK, is a journalist, writer and broadcaster.

After studying criminology at university, though still in his early-20's, he has already had a series unconventional work and voluntary positions. He has worked with researchers studying neurological illnesses like Tourette's syndrome (which he suffers from), has given lectures on the nature of disabilities in the public community, and occasionally ends up speaking on television and radio discussing the events of the day.

He first had academic work published at the age of 22, then still an undergraduate, and has been cited by a wide range of publications: from the Huffington Post, Business Insider, AllThingsDigital, The Atlantic Wire and CBS News.

67
Comments

Join the conversation!

Just In

RE: Google Maps and the mystery of the non-existent town
cocococo013 16th Nov 2009
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer


0 Votes
+ -
anagram software
Metronome49 4th Nov 2009
Did you get the words "not real" out of it? With an extra "G" left over?
0 Votes
+ -
Brilliant!
Whyaylooh 4th Nov 2009
Good find! If that isn't the solution, then it sure is one heck of a coincidence.

It wouldn't surprise me at all if that is it. Similar things -- adding a fictional item that will not affect navigation, such as a small dead-end street or irrelevant feature -- is not at all uncommon among map-makers, creating an intentional but non-functional "error" so that plagiarists can be identified.
0 Votes
+ -
Nice.
bjbrock 4th Nov 2009
And of course we can all guess what the "G" stands for.

Good call.
0 Votes
+ -
Some do Tag their work
MoeFugger Updated - 4th Nov 2009
It may very well be a tag.
The "not real g" sounds to coincidental.
Here is a link to a lot of micro chip tagging.
This example is from an old Cyrix chip
http://molecularexpressions.com/creatures/pages/chili.html

Click on the silicon zoo on that page and then scroll down a bit to view many more chip tags by the makers or designers.
0 Votes
+ -
"g" as in "Google"? (nt)
GuidingLight 4th Nov 2009
wink
I have also found inaccurate maps on google:-
If you search for this town Cannanore,Kerala,India in google maps, it shows its in the sea. Here is the link.

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=Cannanore,+Kerala,+India&sll=11.858489,75.36694&sspn=0.026922,0.030513&ie=UTF8&hq=&hnear=Kannur,+Kerala,+India&ll=11.855591,75.361576&spn=0.028056,0.030513&t=h&z=15&iwloc=A

Bing is not better either. Shows the same location.
0 Votes
+ -
It's a data anamoly
T1Oracle 4th Nov 2009
...and you wrote an entire blog post with links and pictures about it... SMH
0 Votes
+ -
There is a hotel in Argleton
badsoden 4th Nov 2009
Its even more funny, there is a hotel in Argleton also, located at Northway, Argleton, L39 6, UK
You'll find it by searching for argleton; hotel and then you have to zoom un and out a bit and at a partical zoom the hotel is indicated at that address. The link btw, refers to a hotel at hope street in liverpool.
Seems that argleton is not a spot but an area.
Oscar.
(Zack, I'll sent you an email with a screenshot, you could put it in your log as I can't)
0 Votes
+ -
Argleton must be a real town, as
GuidingLight 4th Nov 2009
I heard that is where Elvis lives now.
0 Votes
+ -
Google Maps also couldn't find Shermer, Illinois sad And for that reason I am banning Google Maps!
0 Votes
+ -
ahah!
shis-ka-bob 4th Nov 2009
LD is from a parallel universe after all, please say hello to Ferris. Your
fictional representation of the wonders of Microsoft now makes sense.
For the record, Google maps does find Shermerville, IL (currently in
Northbrook).
0 Votes
+ -
England???? Why do I care??? (NT)
No More Microsoft Software Ever! 4th Nov 2009
NT
0 Votes
+ -
Then why did you bother to post?
Cylon Centurion 4th Nov 2009
NT
0 Votes
+ -
Troll?
Average-IT-Guy 5th Nov 2009
Or massive attention ***** with no life? Or maybe a little bit of both?

Anyway.

England>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>America

wink
0 Votes
+ -
Yes, you are correct...nt
ItsTheBottomLine 5th Nov 2009
nt
0 Votes
+ -
...so I will. Google maps are crap. I have tried it, and have it put the address that I am looking for out in a vacant field somewhere outside of town. When I bring up the combination road map with aerial photo, I find roads plotted in areas where there are no roads. Mapquest, Yahoo, and Bing all seem to do a better job than Google, at least where I live.
0 Votes
+ -
Google's search nearby are also crap
paul2011 4th Nov 2009
Search nearby feature in google maps is also crap. Yahoo maps are much better when looking for businesses or restaurants.
Overall google looks like one giant beta company.
0 Votes
+ -
nt
0 Votes
+ -
Or at least not accurate
unellen 5th Nov 2009
Google maps is user edited as far as I can tell. If someone says its in one place without corroboration, that's where they put it. Many's the time I went to find a place using google and it wasn't where it said it was. Tell the owner of the place and it gets corrected.
0 Votes
+ -
maps are a strange thing
CobraA1 4th Nov 2009
Maps are a strange thing in the online world.

Satellite images are often ages old, maps of new neighborhoods take years to get added, little traveled routes are often way off, etc . . .

"warning: 7MB"

LOL. Took less than 5 secs to download.
0 Votes
+ -
Zack's mind to ask Google itself what's up, rather than blather on mindlessly.
0 Votes
+ -
Fixed it for you...
Li1t 5th Nov 2009
Zack's mind to ask Google itself what's up, rather than blogging.
0 Votes
+ -
Contributr
Well...
zwhittaker 5th Nov 2009
If you don't like it, don't read it. No skin off my nose.
0 Votes
+ -
For years, Yahoo Maps kept getting my home address wrong. It kept returning the "same" address on the "same" street in the adjacent town. The problem was - there was an identically named street in that town. The only way to get the correct address and town to come up in the search was to enter only the Zip+4 (postal code + 4 digit identifier here in the USA) and not the rest of the address.

Yahoo blew off repeated attempts for me to have it corrected, saying they weren't the supplier of the data.

And a more recent example of errors in directions for Google Maps: a couple of weeks ago a friend was coming down to visit us on our boat in a marina on Chesapeake Bay, and the Google Maps' step-by-stp directions said to take a right at a fork in the road, when the pictorial map (and reality) said to take a left...
Very similar problem a few years ago with Google Maps. The had the map a mirror image of reality. I never heard back from e-mails sent to them, and have since stuck with MapQuest. I like Google for most things, but their maps lag behind. I hate to hear that they haven't improved the service.
0 Votes
+ -
See Eric Flint's "1632" series.
Henry Miller 5th Nov 2009
It's about a town in West Virginia the immediate locale of which is pseudo-technologically swapped for a mostly empty patch of the same size in seventeenth century Germany.

Obviously, Argleton used to be there, but now occupies some other space-time locale.
0 Votes
+ -
Probably just a fluke
Rick_R 5th Nov 2009
It's probably just an error. Although mapmakers routinely add fake streets, those are for PRINTED maps. Those people aren't concerned about somebody photocopying a small part of a map for ten people coming to a birthday party. In most areas there are only 2-3 companies that produce printed maps. So one of the producers is concerned about a competitor stealing its work. Realistically, Google competitors have to get their own images, etc., they can't just download "the entire planet" from Google one image at a time.
Google Maps is not infallable; they don't acknowlage the street I live on has a name, for example. On the other hand, neither of my GPS units (different manufacturers) show the road at all (it's only been there for about 4 years). I don't take it personally, nor do I think that it's a massive failure of Google Maps.

It may be an easter-egg, a "prove that someone appropriated our geographic database", a simple error, a data entry error, or other benign reason for being there.

I've been expecting that, for JRR Tolkien's birthday some year, Google would place the various cities, roads, and other landmarks from "The Hobbit" and "The Lord of the Rings" into their database, just for that day, and for Fred Rogers' birthday, have directions to (though not the map location of) "Someplace Else" (for those not familiar, that's 'turn left at meow, turn right at meow, turn right at meow, turn meow at meow'). To my knowlege, they've not done either yet.

On the other hand, if there was an "Argleton" and there were people trying to get there, the misplacement of it in the middle of a field in England might be more of a problem.
0 Votes
+ -
Just a Virtual Village in the middle of neverland !
guaopublicidad@... 5th Nov 2009
Hey guys, why bother ? Maybe is just a lilliputian village which can't be seen from a satellite. Who Knows ? England is a land of mistery happy
I'm not surprised. On the border between PA and WV in the States, PA is labeled as "Tennessee". TN never even touches West Virginia!
0 Votes
+ -
Too bad
Snowden 5th Nov 2009
it's not in Scotland like Brigadoon. Or maybe it is like Brigadoon and won't come back for a 100 years.
Google maps is the only mapping service that has my street on it, albeit misspelled. After e-mailing google and Navtech, as well as marking it on the map with a public note, still no action has been taken. I did this over a year ago.

The street has been around since 2005 and still isn't present on any other mapping services or GPS updates that I've seen. Who knows how/when they update/correct these things. Very annoying.
0 Votes
+ -
Master Joe Says...
MasterJoe 5th Nov 2009
Personally, I rather enjoy getting directions from my house, ehre in Pennsylvania, US, to China. Why? Because Google Maps tells me to kayak across the Pacific Ocean, to Hawaii, and then again to Japan. It later tells me to jet-ski across anothe rportion of the Pacific. That sounds like something I could try, and then sue Google for, as it would surely put me in grave danger. Some people might say taht's stupid, but so are 80% of the lawsuits in this country, and a lot of those people WIN. This, however, is simply a blatant inaccuracy, for which no explanation is offered. To me, regardless of the reason, that diminishes the credibility of the Google Maps software, as no one knows now how many other "errors" there are.

--Master Joe
0 Votes
+ -
RE: Master Joe Says...
trybble1 5th Nov 2009
You are taking this all waaaay to seriously. It used to be that if you would ask for directions from Ohio to Paris, it would give you driving directions to one of the piers in NY city. The next step gave a distance to Portugal and then it said "start swimming!". Obviously it's a joke, as is kayaking to the Far East.
Add to this the mystery of why the very real city of
Canton, Ohio does not appear on Google maps, but a non-
existent town named Colesville does.
hmmm, for Google Maps, these are easter eggs, for Bing Maps, this would render the service inaccurate and unable to be trusted.

Must be nice to see the world through Google's eyes.
0 Votes
+ -
Brigadoon
sboverie 5th Nov 2009
Perhaps Argleton exists one night in a century or something like Brigadoon? I do like the acronym theory.
0 Votes
+ -
Temporal displacement
rhalcom 5th Nov 2009
Temporal anomaly, of course. Someone will call the temporal police..
0 Votes
+ -
nt
0 Votes
+ -
and here's the number
pwn0tr0n 5th Nov 2009
Their emergency number is time-11...
0 Votes
+ -
Mapping errors in the US or just funny
mallen@... 5th Nov 2009
Such things happen. Once I typed my postal zip code into some screen or database of some kind and instead of bringing up my metropolitan hub city of 20K people - it brought up the name of a town that existed during the railroad golden spike days and fur trapping days. I had to look it up and then ask somebody else where it might be. Was once a small border town between ND and MT with maybe a general store and livery stable, but probably plowed over and returned to farmland now. Someone's Wiki humor?
I just found Canton, Ohio in Google maps.
0 Votes
+ -
Sounds like a good place to live
twirth5 5th Nov 2009
because property taxes must be really low, especially so when compared to New Jersey!
0 Votes
+ -
I think it's put there to promote Dan Brown's next book!!
and the hotel that the club had made reservations was only 3 years old. However, this single address showed 3 different locations with in the city, two of them - were empty fields on some farmers land. It looked a lot like the mystery town you have above. You inquire into this - they all point fingers at each other the map service and the providers...ahhh the cloud will make life interesting to say the least.
0 Votes
+ -
Argleton is Not Large
FiOS-Dave 5th Nov 2009
I got that from Leo Grant

Dave
Nearly all major [non-governmental] mapmakers create small fictions in order to easily prosecute those who misappropriate their work. Rand McNally has lots of phony places or geographic features you won't find on the ground.

There certainly are errors in Google Earth, at least in Hawaii. Place names, locations of some towns, etc. are frequently in error here. I have noticed that their street locations are slightly off just about everywhere in the country, at least in all of the towns and cities that I have lived in or visited over the last 60 years. Fortunately, street view often shows the correct address in cities where the laws require people to post their street numbers on the curb or on the wall. At least that way I can correct the street number errors in their map base when I have to be able to find a business or friend.


I think that must be the town of Brigadoon...
0 Votes
+ -
Not Brigadoon, but "The Village"
brattonr 5th Nov 2009
Could it be "The Village" from old "The Prisoner" series?
0 Votes
+ -
Argelton
trybble1 Updated - 5th Nov 2009
It's obviously where Harry Potter now lives. It's accidental appearance on a muggle map will be corrected shortly by the Ministry of Magic.
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer ,
iPod to PC Transfer


Join the conversation!

Formatting +
BB Codes - Note: HTML is not supported in forums
  • [b] Bold [/b]
  • [i] Italic [/i]
  • [u] Underline [/u]
  • [s] Strikethrough [/s]
  • [q] "Quote" [/q]
  • [ol][*] 1. Ordered List [/ol]
  • [ul][*] · Unordered List [/ul]
  • [pre] Preformat [/pre]
  • [quote] "Blockquote" [/quote]
ie8 fix

The best of ZDNet, delivered

ZDNet Newsletters

Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox

Facebook Activity

White Papers, Webcasts, & Resources
ie8 fix