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Reminiscing by looking at a Flickr map... What wonderful stories this map of lower Manhattan and its surroundings brings back to me...
I really need the next wider view to really cover my beginnings. I lived, worked, or studied in all the five boroughs of New York City: Staten Island, Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and The Bronx. This map shows only small parts of Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens.
The Map Butterfly (Araschnia levana) is so named because the wings of its spring generation are marked a bit like a road map. However, this butterfly is famous for having a highly dissimilar summer generation, which has largely black wings with a single white band across. The summer generation resembles a tiny White Admiral more than it resembles its orange map-winged spring generation. It is quite common in Continental Europe but is absent from Britain. It was introduced to both Monmouthshire and Herefordshire in 1912 but only lasted a couple of years. A number were seen in Dorset in 2014 but it seems generally agreed that these too were introduced rather than genuine natural colonists. They are cousins of the Red Admiral but much, much smaller. But their caterpillars similarly feed on nettles. I photographed this spring brood male in Estonia where they seemed to be quite common.
Its scientific name Araschnia also describes the reticulate wing pattern of the spring brood. It comes from the Greek word "arakhnion" for spider's web. Levana was an obscure Roman goddess.
The carving might have provided a reference point for travelers and hunters, by looking at the map they would have been able to navigate the region. There are also theories that the petroglyph was intended to match up with the constellations, and that it could even be used to track the migrations of buffalo, deer, sheep, and elk herds.
Map on handkerschief features direction to wedding venue. Location font based on iconic "Greetings from ..." postcards.
Design + letterpressing by Kelli Anderson
Fabric printing by Spoonflower
Sewing, folding, ironing, envelope typing, stamping by me
An image today of a bygone age. An age when Europe was replete with Imperial Powers, when Europe dominated huge swathes of the globe with mixed effects. Shortly after this image was created it all came tumbling down.
With thanks to all for the contributions today, most of the comments (below) focused less on how the lines on the map have changed, but perhaps how the names by which we know many places have changed over time. Have a great weekend all.....
Collection: The Mason Photographic Collection
Date: ca. 1890-1910
NLI Ref: M57/41
You can also view this image, and many thousands of others, on the NLI’s catalogue at catalogue.nli.ie
I was astounded by Bill Rankin's map of Chicago's racial and ethnic divides and wanted to see what other cities looked like mapped the same way. To match his map, Red is White, Blue is Black, Green is Asian, Orange is Hispanic, Gray is Other, and each dot is 25 people. Data from Census 2000. Base map © OpenStreetMap, CC-BY-SA
I have to make this public in order to use it for a group. Please pay no attention to this.
Edit: This needs to remain public I suppose, so you might as well pay attention to it. :P
Anyway, this is just a map I drew awhile ago (not the background though, that's edited) I'm using it as a background for a WIP group. And I suppose it needs to remain public to work, so yeah, here it is.
Went on an English Heritage members only tour of Fort Widley. Fort Widley is one of the forts surrounding Portsmouth dockyard to prevent it being attacked from the land.
A view of the map room in the nuclear bunker under Fort Widley in the old magazine. One of the "Cold War" Civil Defence Centres.
M/Vale&Ara
You can check my daily feed on instagram @donandreeu
Constructive and destructive comments are always welcome! Don't be shy and say something about the picture :) feedback is always useful.
Sometimes a picture is worth a thousand words. BBN is the random scatter of green in the middle (early ARPANET). Sprint is the organized star topology in purple near the top. AOL is a gray disconnected island in the lower center. There is little correlation between this network connectivity graph and physical geography, except for a clustering of Pac Rim connectivity.
Here is a gallery of Internet maps by Ches of Lumeta, and Ben below provides a link to a huge map with labels.
This technique can also see the network “lights go out” during wartime bombing raids.
In a nutshell, they use a modified hacker trick of sending a storm of IP packets out randomly across the network. Each packet is programmed to self-destruct after a delay, and when this happens, the packet failure notice reports back the path the packet took before it died. To visualize this sea of data, Ches applied place & route software from the semiconductor CAD industry to untangle the hairball of data and spread it out in a 2D map that humans can easily absorb. In these maps, one can see security gaps and unknown network connections. (disclosure: we invested them when they spun out of Bell Labs)
Wasn't planning on trying to buy anything, but the fact that this map was still intact had my interest peaked. After the whole Wellsville mess, I thought I'll give it a go here. BTW, I've got an update for Wellsville with a story on Wednesday.
Horseheads, NY. February 2019.
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If you would like to use THIS picture in any sort of media elsewhere (such as newspaper or article), please send me a Flickrmail or send me an email at natehenderson6@gmail.com
To view the live map visit www.whatsthatpicture.com/flickr/commons-map.php
In the past I've posted about some experiments I had done with Flickr Commons images on Google Earth and the Layar mobile phone Augmented Reality browser - see www.whatsthatpicture.com/2011/12/mapping-flickr-commons
I have recently also got a web version up and running using OpenStreetMap and whilst it's not quite as slick as I'd like it top be I thought I'd throw it out to you to get some feedback - see www.whatsthatpicture.com/flickr/commons-map.php
Note that for performance reasons it will only show 250 images at a time, but you'll always see at the bottom the total number of Commons images there are in the region displayed. To see more just zoom in and pan around. If you want a good region to try it out in I'd suggest heading to Ireland, as shown in the above screen capture!
This B & W Map was copied from the Internet, then coloured and highlighted by me, to show just how large Canada is as compared to Europe. The Quote is from 'Canada Facts', also from the Internet. Canada is outlined in red.
Please enlarge the map to see it better.
Canada is populated mainly in cities close to the US Border and has only 1/10th of the population of the US. Services are therefore more limited in evey aspect, due to the thousands of miles across Canada with empty, almost unpopulated areas, more evident in the Northern areas. Parts of the Great Lakes are on the US Side, but I had no accurate area to draw the dividing red line.
"Canada is the world's second largest country with an area of 9,970,610 km. (3,851,809 sq. mi.). Russia is the largest with an area of 17,075,272 km. (6,591,055 sq. mi.). Continental United states has an area of 9,428,692 km. (3,639,475 sq. mi.), but with Hawaii, Alaska andits territories it has a combined area of 10,828,548 km. (4,179,819 sq. mi.). Brazil has an area of 8,544,822 km. (3,298,301 sq. mi.). China has a continental area of 9,634,014 km. (3,718,729 sq. mi.), but with outlying territories added it has a combined area of 13,679,699km. (5,280,384 sq. mi.).
LOCATION: ALL OF CANADA!
This was originally the "M" on the Mapes Hotel and Casino sign in Reno. The art deco hotel was demolished to make way for a giant slab of concrete. This cowboy shaped "M" can be seen inside the Pioneer Hotel building at the Western Folklife Center in Elko, Nevada.
hqa đi chơi vs lớp , má ơi bao zui =))))))))))))
mấy bạn cm nhìu nhìu mìh sẽ bn* cho coi nhé =)))
Sculpture on the seafront in Minehead, Somerset. It was designed by local student Sarah Ward and created by Owen Cunningham, and features a giant pair of hands holding a map of the South West Coast Path.
Minehead is the beginning (or end) of the South West Coast Path which is 1014km long - quite a walk!
The path originated as a route for the Coastguard to walk from lighthouse to lighthouse patrolling for smugglers.
Yes, I see the irony in having a world map and a compass while that case literally contains a smartphone with all the things in it but...deal with it, it's pretty.