Dublin. Relief shown by contours, altitude tints, and spot heights. Heights are in meters. "Refer to this map as: Sheet NN 29 & PTS N 30, M 29 & 30, series 1301." Exhibited in “Faces and Places,” at the Boston Public Library, Boston, MA, October 2003 - September 2004. MB (BRL). Published by the Army Map Service, the map series of which this map of Ireland is a part, had its origins in an ambitious project called the International Map of the World. The idea, conceived by German geographer Albrecht Penck, was to create a series of 2,500 topographic map sheets that would cover the planet, al


Dublin. Relief shown by contours, altitude tints, and spot heights. Heights are in meters. "Refer to this map as: Sheet NN 29 & PTS N 30, M 29 & 30, series 1301." Exhibited in “Faces and Places,” at the Boston Public Library, Boston, MA, October 2003 - September 2004. MB (BRL). Published by the Army Map Service, the map series of which this map of Ireland is a part, had its origins in an ambitious project called the International Map of the World. The idea, conceived by German geographer Albrecht Penck, was to create a series of 2,500 topographic map sheets that would cover the planet, all in the same scale of 1 centimeter equals 10 kilometers (or 1:1,000,000). In 1913, an international conference established standards and practices for the project, giving each participating country responsibility for creating its own maps. Although the project was eventually taken over by the United Nations, funding and international enthusiasm soon waned. After World War II, several countries (including the United States and the United Kingdom) published their own world map series at a scale of 1:1,000, , Ireland Northern Ireland


Size: 3030px × 4825px
Photo credit: © LM/BT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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