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A map of languages and language families from notes for a conspecies I've been working on for a while. You can see the full version here.
Last night was spent in a high mountain hut.
In evening during the dark we have to use candles and headlamps for anything we do.
This is Lárus chekcing the map for nearest summits, however the fog prevented us from long trips this w-end.
This map has everything on it. Every single item I've ever put on this map, even if I am not currently using it, or if it even exists anymore. There are a number of services that just don't exist here.
Compare it to the services on version 6. Services that went out of existence. Services that changed their business model (free->pay), services that I just stopped using.
Used in sysmango.com/content/social-network-map-good-bye-pingfm-e....
This visual represents the map in my head when I improvise on trombone.
The multi-colored lines trace a chromatic scale, with the horizontal line connecting alternate positions and the junction between registers. The purple grid is a map of major triads for the middle range. The numbers are slide position. Alternate position in the outer extremities are less commonly used but can come in handy.
This is pretty much the full practical range of a slide trombone. I bet that graphing the alternate positions of a trombone with an F-key Attachment would look even more interesting.
Lionel’s Model Builder Magazine
Repository: Penn State Special Collections, University Park, PA, USA.
Looking for this photo at the Penn State Special Collections? You’ll find it in the Bellefonte Central Railroad Records, Historical Collections and Archives.
London City Map with featuring important places like Hospitals, Airport, Highways etc.
Source : London Map | Map of London
It appear the massive terrazzo map might still exist, but in ruins...
www.360cities.net/image/tent-of-tomorrow-1964-worlds-fair...
nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2015/05/will-this-worlds-fa...
Out of all the maps I bought recently, this one seems the most fragile, so I haven't looked at it as much. It does have Texaco locations posted on the map, but it lists only locations within 1/4 mile of a major non-toll highway, so I wonder if there were any more in the state. This one also shows a much more detailed map of the World's Fair than the Sunoco map and includes illustrations of "the world's largest road map" exhibit at the 1964 World's Fair.
Here are some more maps and map images that I figured I would share to go along with the ones I posted before. I figured I would do these as a mass upload then go back to the more typical retail pictures I post.
The full road maps were way too large to fit into the scanner and I didn't want to risk damaging the maps so I mostly copied covers, advertisements, and certain city maps. I do want to figure out a decent way to photograph the full maps without harming them. All of these ones are larger than the Ohio Turnpike Map I posted before.
An elaborate map of the British Empire in 1886, marked in the traditional colour for imperial British dominions on maps
A few cupcakes made to go with the dora cake. Vanilla cupcakes with vanilla buttercream and handmade fondant toppers
Description: Fourth of four wage maps showing showing weekly wages earned by residents in the area between W. Polk Street to W. 12th Street, and the Rock Island Railroad tracks to State Street. The map is an insert in Residents of Hull-House; Hull-House Maps and Papers (New York: Crowell, 1895).
Date: 1895
Geographic coverage: Near West Side, Chicago, Illinois
Collection: Hull-House Collection
Repository: Richard J. Daley Library, University of Illinois at Chicago
File Name: HH_Wage_Ma_4
Rights: This image may be used freely, with attribution, for research, study and educational purposes. For permission to publish, distribute, or use this image for any other purpose, please contact Special Collections and University Archives, University of Illinois at Chicago Library at lib-spec@uic.libanswers.com
Acknowledgement: Funded by a Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) grant awarded by the Illinois State Library under Jesse White; Secretary of State.
For more images from the collection, visit http://collections.carli.illinois.edu/cdm4/index_uic_7sh....
Graptemys ouachitensis—Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife and Fish Refuge, Minnesota-Wisconsin, United States. Ramsar site no. 1901.
This bike is for sale right now on Fleabag. I really don't like Flaebag and paysmell, so I'm willing to sell the bike outside of those parameters for 10% Less than the asking price. If your interested please PM me. Sportfil/Randonneur
Population per square kilometer by US census block, 2010. Map prepared by Boyd Shearer for the Department of Geography,
February, 2017 using QGIS 2.18 on Ubuntu 16.04. Data acquired from the U.S. Department of Commerce, U.S. Census Bureau,
Geography Division, TIGER/Line: www.census.gov/geo/maps-data/data/tiger-data.html
Jasper Johns. (American, born 1930). Map. 1961. Oil on canvas, 6' 6" x 10' 3 1/8" (198.2 x 314.7 cm). Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Scull. © 2008 Jasper Johns / Licensed by VAGA, New York
Reflecting on his choice of easily recognizable images, Johns said that he was interested in "the idea of knowing an image rather than just seeing it out of the corner of your eye." The map of the United States, in its ubiquity and iconicity, is "seen and not looked at, not examined." Preserving the overall proportions of the country and the shape of its states, Johns's energetic application of paint
subverts the conventions of cartography, as do the stenciled names of states, such as Colorado, which is repeated in several locations. Map invites close inspection because its content is both familiar and imaginary.
Mind Map. Resumen del Libro El Poder de la Inteligencia Creativa
Dibujado en el AVE Barcelona-Zaragoza, el 29 de Octubre de 2012
A map of London and environs, dated 1852. This area is now part of Greater London. At the time, it comprised the City of London, City of Westminster, and parts of the counties of Middlesex, Essex, Surrey, and Kent.
The built-up area in 1852 was not much greater than what is now called Central London, with part of the East End. There was not much development west of Mayfair, which had many of the aristocratic mansions.
One feature of the map is the railroad lines entering London. Four of the main stations had already been built. One feature of the map is the railroad lines entering London. Four of the main stations had already been built. Euston was first built in 1837, and rebuilt in something like its present form in 1849. Paddington was opened in 1838, and was rebuilt in 1854. Waterloo was opened in 1848, and took its present form in 1922. Kings Cross was opened in 1852.
Other important stations which had not yet been built were Victoria (1860), Charing Cross (1864), St. Pancras (1868), and Liverpool Street (1874). Other stations are on the map, but I presume that they have since disappeared.
The map was made by George Cox, and published by the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. It seems appropriate to geotag it with St. Paul's Cathedral.
This map indicates the ever-changing borders and names in Africa.
Pear’s Cyclopaedia 1926. Pocket edition.
Twenty two complete works of reference in one handy volume. Herbert C. Barratt ed. Published by A.& F. Pears Ltd. London. 1000 pages, 10 cm x 16 cm.
Arothron mappa, map puffer. A large puffer fish which can be approached by careful divers. What a beauty!
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