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La CEU 2018 fue la mejor oportunidad para conocer los proyectos geográficos más innovadores del Ecuador e interactuar con los principales expertos de las diferentes industrias a nivel regional, un evento para las personas a las que les gustan los mapas, para amantes de ArcGIS y para quienes quieren tomar mejores decisiones.
¡La CEU es para todos!
Item Number: MAPS-122
Document Title:Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey. Map Of, Alaska Scale 1"= 40 Miles
Project: MAPS __Maps __ _14 Miscellaneous Projects
Location:Olmsted National Historic Site, Brookline, MA
Category:PLAN
Purpose: TOPO
Physical Characteristics: __0000200926 __36 x 40.5 lith pos __color ink paper
Dates: 1904
Notes: Compiled under the direction of R.U. Goode, Geographer, by E.C. Barnard, Topographer. Preliminary Edition. Issued as a supplepment to The National Geographic Magazine, May, 1904. Inset Aleutian Islands. Note with key map. Rec'd OBLA, 13-Sep-1904 Maps-122.
Artist/Creator: U.S. Department of Interior
Please Credit: Courtesy of the United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic Site.
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Deleted water, put in fillers so you can't go to one side, place a portal, and come back up. This is the last and only part finished. Not big, but not bad for a first map. I seen worse.
Virginia Institute of Marine's Marine Advisory Program's 'Teachers on the Estuary: A Field Course on Virginia's Coastal Ecosystems' workshop held along the Eastern Shore. Jun 24, 2019. (Photo by Aileen Devlin | Virginia Sea Grant)
The Map is common throughout the lowlands of central and eastern Europe, and is expanding its range in western Europe. The Summer form seen here is very different from the Spring form (see previous).
In the UK this species is a very rare vagrant, but there have been several unsuccessful attempts at introducing tit over the past 100 years or so: in the Wye Valley in 1912, the Wyre Forest in the 1920s, South Devon 1942, Worcester 1960s, Cheshire 1970s, South Midlands 1990s. All these introductions failed and eggs or larvae have never been recorded in the wild in the UK. (Under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 it is now illegal to release a non-native species into the wild.)
The Map is unusual in that its two annual broods look very different. The summer brood are black with white markings, looking like a miniature version of the White Admiral and lacking most of the orange of the pictured spring brood.
The eggs are laid in long strings, one on top of the other, on the underside of stinging nettles, the larval foodplant. It is thought that these strings of eggs mimic the flowers of the nettles, thereby evading predators. The larvae feed gregariously and hibernate as pupae.