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The International Map of the World (called the Millionth Map after its scale of 1:1000000) was a project begun in 1913 to create a complete map of the world according to internationally agreed standards. Roads were depicted in red, towns and railways were depicted in black, and the labels were written in the Roman alphabet. The Central Bureau of the Map of the World was established at the Ordnance Survey in London. After the Second World War, the United Nations took over the project, and interest waned. Only 800 to 1,000 of 2,500 planned maps were completed.〔 ==Map Indexing System== A system was developed for dividing the globe into sections spanning six degrees of longitude by four degrees latitude.〔 〕 Longitudinal slices are numbered 1 (180-174°West) through 60 (174-180°East). Latitudinal slices are named NA (0-4°North) through NV (84-88°North) and SA (0-4°South) through SV (84-88°South). For example * Map NJ-10〔 〕 covers 36-40°N, 120-126°W including San Francisco at . * SG-35〔 〕 covers 24-28°S, 24-30°E including Johannesburg at . * NL-49 (below, right) covers 44-48N, 48-54E including Astrakhan at . * NI-54〔 〕 covers 32-36°N, 138-144°E including Tokyo at . Due to shortening of longitudinal distances with increasing latitude, longitudinal span beyond 60 degrees latitude doubles to twelve degrees. Beyond 76 degrees it doubles again to 24 degrees. This indexing system outlived the international project and is still used in national and international mapping programs by Australia,〔 〕 Russia,〔 〕 and the United States.〔 〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「International Map of the World」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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