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In the square in Puerto Villamil, there is a fountain with a map of the Galapagos islands. Sadly it looked a little run-down and had no water in it.
Abstract map drawn when the state of Tennessee purchased portions of Winchester Cemetery for the Interstate 40,
Information on Tennessee's abandoned cemeteries: www.tn.gov/environment/program-areas/arch-archaeology/ser...
39. Grand Prix Osterhas am Ostersamstag, 31. März 2018, auf der Lindenmoosstrasse in Affoltern am Albis. Kategorie Elite-Amateure..Foto Martin Platter
...or should that be Maps & GPS?
The white gadget is a SONY GPS-CS3 - it logs he GPS position which can then be used by the GPS Image Tracker software to load the GPS coordinates to the EXIF data of an image - so it's great for working out where you've been and where you were when you took a photo.but not so much use for getting there in the first place!
Ik geef niks weg, maar heel erg moeilijk is-ie ook niet, zeker niet door de naam van dit geinig buurtschap erop
Photo albums covered in vintage world maps and bound with vintage brads. These make great travel albums.
You may have seen my 'St. Jacques' Metro map. That map was full of stations named after people I met at university.
This map, which I'm redesigning, incorporates stations named after people from secondary school. All the stations are named, but check this link: speedytortoisetravel.webs.com/centrallineblues.htm
The lines are so complicated, and every other station seems to have an interchange. I started from the lines for this 'city', unlike the St. Jacques one where I started from scribbled lines in a circle and slowly neatened everything out, and adding stations from there.
Joining up the lines makes a contrived, tangled, map which will turn out to be extremely tall and very narrow. I think it's probably impossible to join everything up... so I'm redesigning everything into a map not dissimilar to the St. Jacques one.
I've also missed out a lot of people on the line diagrams so this is a good opportunity to include everyone. I'll finish this at some point in the far future...
Yes, I've even done one for primary school. It was absolutely crazy. It had 1,331 lines in total. I only knew one line, well part of it, anyway. It was extremely complicated, branched as hell and had about 700 stations on it. I don't think I'll redesign it.
I also have a map for all my friends in Corsica, but it suffers from the same problem as the Conapega map, as once again, I started from the lines. I may redesign that one too, but I won't have a circle! Too mainstream.