Quest for a Map
It is officially not cool to call your partner who refuses directions a "cave man." The oldest map in Western Europe has been unearthed and decoded, and it's pretty good, too.
The etchings of a landscape on a hand-sized rock are 14,000 years old. Eat it, MapQuest. Archeologists were able to match the landmarks of the map to a region in Northern Spain where the portable guide was found. The carvings, which seem to point out reindeer, ibex, and a stag, led researchers to believe that it's the oldest hunting map to be discovered in Western Europe. Check out images of the ancient maps here.
Other scientists dispute the findings, announced in New Scientist, theorizing that it is typical of the art for that period. Or possibly, a spiritual map. Deep.
Still, the next time you take a drive, really, don't fear the GPS. Seems some people have been needing directions for years.
Presidential Statesmanship: A Web Map
Time for Electoral College class again: In the close contest that is the 2008 U.S. presidential election, how each state as a whole will swing for a candidate determines the next four years of political leadership. (Well, except for Maine and Nebraska, who divvy up the electoral votes.)
Of course, the scenario is far more nuanced then that. Reader's Digest, for instance, introduces readers to "Supervoters," about six groups that include "Millenial Evangelicals" and "First-Generation Asians." While targeting those groups is part of the vote-gathering strategy, campaigners are also breathing down the backs of what RD calls the "purple" undecided states.
As polls obsessively measure the possible Electoral College make-up, Search presents another set of numbers to look at—and the maps below show which states are heavily researching each contender. A little explanation is in order:
The color legend (low, medium, and hot) denotes the fervor of the 50 states relative to one another within one candidate's searches. Obviously, some state populations are much larger than others, so the fervor is measured roughly as Search Per Capita, rather than total number of queries per state.
What the four maps don't show is who gets the most Web interest from each state or from the country as a whole. That answer, at least over the past seven days, is Sarah Palin. She received 2.5 times more look-ups than Barack Obama, four times more than John McCain, and 24 times more than Joe Biden. (To save you from the algebra work, Obama leads McCain in searches by 58%). Now, onto the visuals:
Top 10 Regions: New Jersey; Virginia; New Hampshire; Ohio; Mississippi; North Carolina; Indiana; Washington, D.C.; Michigan; and Connecticut

Top 10 Regions: Washington, D.C.; Virginia; New York; Georgia; Colorado; Oregon; New Jersey; Maryland; Florida; and North Carolina

Top 10 Regions: New Jersey; Washington, D.C.; Connecticut; New York; Massachusetts; Michigan; Georgia; Florida; Pennsylvania; and Illinois

Top 10 Regions: Alaska, Montana, Connecticut, North Dakota, Mississippi, Alabama, Oklahoma, New Hampshire, Tennessee, and Kansas

Filed under: Politics, Elections, Presidents, Maps
The 2008 Presidential Numbers Game
John McCain's campaign manager called the presidential election more about character than about issues, but—as the earlier delegates situation showed—the 2008 contest has always been a numbers game.
CNN reports that McCain has passed Barack Obama in several national surveys. However, the Democratic candidate may still hold ground in numbers that really get a person into the Oval Office: electoral college votes ... but more on this later.
Web interest (not always a sign of popularity, but definitely an indicator of curiosity) has shifted as well, but that picture isn't so clear-cut either. Searches for “john mccain” scooted past “barack obama” on August 29 and 30th, lost ground for the next two days, and then asserted a tight lead Sept. 2, a big boost on Sept. 4, then back to a tight lead.
However, when different searches are combined, a different story emerges. Barack Obama—also queried as “barack hussein obama,” “senator barack obama,” “democrat barack obama” and misspelled as “barrack” and “brack”—is now mostly commonly referred to as plain ol’ “obama.”
Obama then not only holds the surname lead over “mccain,” but if the variations of their names are added up, the Democratic candidate consistently pulls in more Search curiosity than his Republican counterpart... except on September 5, 2008, the day after the RNC acceptance speech. McCain scored a 2% margin in Web interest. The last time McCain got the edge on Obama was October 11, 2006.
Again, this Search see-saw isn't necessarily positive for either side. Thousands of citizens are still investigating pesistent rumors, tracking voting records, sniffing out scandals, and combing through their family trees.
Ultimately, the results will come down to complicated math. The United States is rare in its continued use of the electoral college, the founding fathers' compromise between the direct votes and a legislative pick. Ironically, the electoral college emerged partly out of the belief that "gentlemen" shouldn't stoop to campaigning: "The office should seek the man, the man should not seek the office." (Not that behind-the-scenes politicking didn't occur, as one public radio report outlines.) The U.S. National Archives devotes a site to the whole electoral college concept ... and efforts to change it.
Meanwhile, many searchers already monitor "electoral votes," the "2008 electoral map" (+69%), and "electoral votes by state" (20%).
That explains the focus on so-called battleground states, in which neighbor is pitted against neigbor. Electoral votes notwithstanding, people want their individual voice heard. Online lookups persist on "am I registered to vote," "how do I register to vote," and—a most modern twist in an old-fashioned system—"how to register to vote online."
Filed under: Politics, History, Polls, Elections, Presidents, Maps
McCain Statesmanship
The peculiar turnabout that posited veteran John McCain (veteran in every sense of the word) as a comeback kid also appeared in Buzz politics. Searches for the Arizona senator and second-time contender for the Oval Office rebounded 700%, the highest spike of all candidates in January. His online followers still lag behind those for fellow competitor Ron Paul but, more importantly, he has more state delegates.
Early primary states (South Carolina, New Hampshire, and Florida) studied him closely, to make those his 1st, 2nd and 4th states. Those who have followed, if not jumped on, the so-called maverick's bandwagon include Massachusetts, one of the Super Tuesday states.
Now McCain has received the heavyweight endorsement of California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. That might be good considering the middling interest from Golden State. See how searches in January may dovetail with Super Tuesday primaries in the map below.

Filed under: Politics, Elections, Maps, 2008 Super Tuesday
top movers
| Rank | Subject | 1-Day Move |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Worst Airports For Delays 2009 | Breakout! |
| 2 | How To Survive A Recession | Breakout! |
| 3 | Ice Cream Calorie Counter | Breakout! |
| 4 | Jayson Williams | Breakout! |
| 5 | Alexandra Kerry | Breakout! |
| 6 | Chaz Bono | 10707% |
| 7 | Kelly Osbourne | 3298% |
| 8 | Jennifer Hudson | 3218% |
| 9 | Nicole Richie | 2075% |
| 10 | Thierry Henry | 1125% |

top leaders
| Rank | Subject | Move | Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Black Friday | +413 | 1016 |
| 2 | Elizabeth Lambert | -677 | 263 |
| 3 | NFL | +66 | 235 |
| 4 | New Moon | +74 | 213 |
| 5 | Bing | +83 | 209 |
| 6 | Kelly Osbourne | +193 | 199 |
| 7 | Hulu | +7 | 139 |
| 8 | Nicole Richie | +124 | 130 |
what's the buzz?
A subject's buzz score is the percentage of Yahoo! users searching for that subject on a given day, multiplied by a constant to make the number easier to read. Weekly leaders are the subjects with the greatest average buzz score for a given week.
For more detailed information, visit our FAQ.