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  • This map is part of a series which comprises 50 maps which covers the whole of Australia at a scale of 1:1 000 000 (1cm on a map represents 10km on the ground). Each standard map covers an area of 6 degrees longitude by 4 degrees latitude or about 590 kilometres east to west and about 440 kilometres from north to south. These maps depict natural and constructed features including transport infrastructure (roads, railway airports), hydrography, contours, hypsometric and bathymetric layers, localities and some administrative boundaries, making this a useful general reference map.

  • This map is part of a series which comprises 50 maps which covers the whole of Australia at a scale of 1:1 000 000 (1cm on a map represents 10km on the ground). Each standard map covers an area of 6 degrees longitude by 4 degrees latitude or about 590 kilometres east to west and about 440 kilometres from north to south. These maps depict natural and constructed features including transport infrastructure (roads, railway airports), hydrography, contours, hypsometric and bathymetric layers, localities and some administrative boundaries, making this a useful general reference map.

  • This map is part of a series which comprises 50 maps which covers the whole of Australia at a scale of 1:1 000 000 (1cm on a map represents 10km on the ground). Each standard map covers an area of 6 degrees longitude by 4 degrees latitude or about 590 kilometres east to west and about 440 kilometres from north to south. These maps depict natural and constructed features including transport infrastructure (roads, railway airports), hydrography, contours, hypsometric and bathymetric layers, localities and some administrative boundaries, making this a useful general reference map.

  • This map is part of a series which comprises 50 maps which covers the whole of Australia at a scale of 1:1 000 000 (1cm on a map represents 10km on the ground). Each standard map covers an area of 6 degrees longitude by 4 degrees latitude or about 590 kilometres east to west and about 440 kilometres from north to south. These maps depict natural and constructed features including transport infrastructure (roads, railway airports), hydrography, contours, hypsometric and bathymetric layers, localities and some administrative boundaries, making this a useful general reference map.

  • All 1:250,000 scale NATMAP topographic maps available on CD in ECW format as a seamless map image. Map projection is Equirectangular/Geographic/Geodetic/Plate Caree - best suited for measuring position and for use in conjunction with GPS. Together with individual map images with full marginalia. Map projection is Map Grid of Australia - best suited for measuring distances and areas. 1:1,000,000 scale maps and 50m Landsat satellite image are also included.

  • The University of Geosciences in Wuhan is developing the computer systems to help the provincial surveys re-map the geology of China at 1:250 000 and 50 000 scales in just 12 years. With a land area 25% larger than Australia's, China has about 15 000 1:50 000 map sheets! The maps are really just by-products, though, as the ultimate goal is to build a computer database of the geology and mineral resources of the whole of China. LIU Songfa and I went to Wuhan in late 1999 to talk to Professor WU and his colleagues about techniques of field-data acquisition and geoscience database design.

  • All 1:250,000 scale NATMAP topographic maps available on CD in ECW format as a seamless map image. Map projection is Equirectangular/Geographic/Geodetic/Plate Caree - best suited for measuring position and for use in conjunction with GPS. 1:1,000,000 scale maps and 50m Landsat satellite image are also included.

  • <p>The map covers an area of 1.6 degrees longitude by 2.17 degrees latitude or about 160 kilometres from east to west and about 238 kilometres from north to south. <p>This map contains natural and constructed features including road infrastructure, vegetation, hydrography, contours (interval 50m), localities and administrative boundaries for the Francois Peron National Park and Shark Bay Marine Park, both inclusive of a World Heritage Area. <p>The reverse side of the map depicts the same area using a satellite image with an overlay of major roads, tourism features and facilities as well as insets featuring the towns of Carnarvon and Denham. <p>The topographic map and data index shows coverage of the sheets. <p>Product Specifications: <p>Coverage: The series covers the whole of Australia with 513 maps. <p>Currency: Ranges from 1995 to 2009. 95% of maps have a reliability date of 1994 or later. <p>Coordinates: <p>Geographical and either AMG or MGA (post-1993) <p>Datum: AGD66, GDA94, AHD. <p>Projection: Universal Traverse Mercator (UTM) <p>Forward Program: Selected maps under revision.

  • This map is part of a series which comprises 50 maps which covers the whole of Australia at a scale of 1:1 000 000 (1cm on a map represents 10km on the ground). Each standard map covers an area of 6 degrees longitude by 4 degrees latitude or about 590 kilometres east to west and about 440 kilometres from north to south. These maps depict natural and constructed features including transport infrastructure (roads, railway airports), hydrography, contours, hypsometric and bathymetric layers, localities and some administrative boundaries, making this a useful general reference map.

  • The map covers an area of 0.82 degrees longitude by 0.92 degrees latitude or about 82 kilometres from east to west and about 63 kilometres from north to south. This map contains natural and constructed features including roads, foot tracks, hydrography, vegetation, contours (interval 20m), localities and some administrative boundaries. The reverse side of the map depicts the same area using a satellite image with an overlay of major roads, foot tracks, tourism features and facilities as well as insets featuring Uluru, Kata Tjuta and Yulara. This is map 3 of Australia's Red Centre National Landscapes series.