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The area roughly represented by the table is here shown outlined in black. The main geographic features are the village of Wolfsdorf (mostly off the table), the town of Goldberg and the road net converging on it, and a large wooded hill called the Flensberg, just to the southeast of the town. Lauriston's V Corps is advancing boldly on Goldberg, expecting no resistance since Yorck's 1st Prussian Corps was last observed withdrawing northwards in some haste.
Yorktown, Virginia - a mainly military family town in Hampton Roads, VA where our claim to fame is the last major battle of the Revolutionary War. We bring it 1781 style yo.
In my spare time, apart from poking around falling down old buildings, I also make maps. This is one of my better ones.
This map, on a larger scale, shows the individual streets in Bradford. It was still a small place with fields almost to the centre of town. The population the previous year was 6393. Manningham Lane has been built and the Bradford Canal with its wharves near the Parish Church is now shown
John Johnson
Scale - 20 inches to 1 mile
Mapa mental de las áreas o ámbitos de desarrollo de las tic (tecnologÃas de la información y las comunicaciones)
People keep asking me where the Lost City is, so I thought I'd put up a map.
(Or if you prefer - Google Maps)
As far as I'm aware it's still there - I certainly haven't heard anything about it being demolished yet.
This seems like a good point to show something. The software for matching the projector is pretty usable now. So.. it's on to the dreaded manual modelling of the final shape o_O
By Jocudus Hondius the Elder (I think) and showing the circumnavigation of Thomas Cavendish in 1586-88. During which he buckled some serious swash.
This is a photograph of a map at the Science Museum in London.
It's all a bit different now! Western dock is filled in and flats are built on it, with News International (soon to be gone) where the warehouses were to the north. Tobacco dock is partially filled in, Eastern dock is a park / woodland. Shadwell basin's still there, with houses built around three sides where the warehouses once stood. Regents Canal Dock, now known as Limehouse Basin, is also still there and is used as a marina. Most of the Surrey Docks were filled in, though Greenland Dock survives.
The warehouse number 10, south of Tobacco Dock, is (I think) 21 Wapping Lane and is still there (see my other Docklands photos), but not for long. Ballymore are planning to turn it into a large residential development. The warehouses north of Tobacco Dock were converted into a shopping centre in the 80s, but it never really took off and is almost empty now, bar a single sandwich shop.
The USGS GNIS placename database was used to make this map. Place names that end in "Hollow" are shown with an orange got, while those ending in "Gulch" get a blue dot.
Clearly, "Gulch" is common in the West and rare in the East. "Hollow", on the other hand, is very common in the Appalachians, Ozarks, Texas, and elsewhere in the East, but is also found in a few western regions—notably Utah and north-central Oregon.
Source data, USGS GNIS placename database and ESRI's state boundary data. Software, ESRI ArcGIS.
Move beyond the obstacles in your life with the Overcome Obstacles Mind Map.
Read more about this Mind Map at the IQ Matrix Blog.
Map made for Wikipedia and the Wikimedia Commons.
This is a map of the Salmon River of Idaho. Created based on USGS and Digital Chart of the World data.
Commons link: commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Salmon_River_Idaho_Map.png
Used on various pages including
➜ LM: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Palmwood/62/206/981
➜ FB: www.facebook.com/clubencoresl
➜ Discord: discord.gg/cWaQmerSsW
Yesterday it was cold outside so what is better than dreaming on a map.
(Inspired by an old map showing a portion of the cost line in Brazil from Piri Reis, Ottoman empire's admiral around 1500 ).
Ieri era freddo cosa c'è di meglio che sognare davanti a una mappa.
(Ispirato da una mappa di Piri Reis, ammiraglio dell'impero Ottomano, disegnata attorno il 1500 e raffigurante una porzione del Brasile).
This is a map of everywhere I've visited in the Bay Area from 2008 to March 2012. The map is colored by year so you can see how my travels change over the years.
This map was generated from GPS logs gathered by geoloqi.com and run through a custom script that projects the GPS logs onto a 2D image. There is a little bit of logic to smooth out the lines and remove some (but not all) GPS noise.
The top left corner is San Francisco, and the yellow spot in the bottom right is the San Jose airport. The long lines stretching across the image is from airplane flights.
There is approximately one GPS point recorded every 2-6 seconds when I am moving.
Please contact me if you would like to use this image, I would be happy to provide a version without the watermarks.
A Frontier Airlines (second) new directions route map from May/June 1999.
Frontier operated nine 737-200s and 11 737-300s in June 1999, the Flight Fleet Analyzer shows.
(I love maps.) I assume its OK to post this for this kind of purpose. This is part of the "Geologic Map of the Northwest Cascades, Washington" by E.H. Brown, et al. 1987. (More detail may be seen on the "Geologic Map of the Mount Baker 30- by 60-Minute Quadrangle, Washington" by R.W. Tabor et al.
On Exactitude in Science . . . In that Empire, the Art of Cartography attained such Perfection that the map of a single Province occupied the entirety of a City, and the map of the Empire, the entirety of a Province. In time, those Unconscionable Maps no longer satisfied, and the Cartographers Guilds struck a Map of the Empire whose size was that of the Empire, and which coincided point for point with it. The following Generations, who were not so fond of the Study of Cartography as their Forebears had been, saw that that vast Map was Useless, and not without some Pitilessness was it, that they delivered it up to the Inclemencies of Sun and Winters. In the Deserts of the West, still today, there are Tattered Ruins of that Map, inhabited by Animals and Beggars; in all the Land there is no other Relic of the Disciplines of Geography.
Suarez Miranda,Viajes de varones prudentes, Libro IV,Cap. XLV, Lerida, 1658
From Jorge Luis Borges, Collected Fictions, Translated by Andrew Hurley Copyright Penguin 1999 .
Flyer advertising land sales by auction at Central Estate, Glen Waverley. Note continuous spelling of Glen Waverley.
The estate plan includes road names of Ada Street, Bridget Street and John Street (now Batten Street). The land had previously been owned by the late John O'Dea. See locale with Google Maps
The Waverley Streets database notes the following about these streets:
Ada Street:
Ada Petter was the mother of John O'Dea II
Bridget Street:
Bridget was the grandmother of John O'Dea II.
Batten Street:
Named after the Batten family who lived in the area. West end being part of the 25 lots in the Central Estate auctioned on 26.5.1951 by Hammand Olsen and TG Newton. Being part of the estate of the late John O'Dea. East end being part of 97 lots in the Syndal Heights Estate auctioned on 3.3.1951 at 2.30pm in a seated marquee by H P Knight and Richard Somers. Originally shown as John St on the auction notice.
Text source: Waverley Streets Database
The Monash Public Library Service holds the original material at the Monash Federation Centre, 3 Atherton Road, Oakleigh
Classification code: H23/CEN