it depends on the scale of a map
The symbols on a map are explained in the
grassland
a Scale.
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A small black dot on a map usually represents a city, town, village.
1:10 or 1/10. A decimeter is one tenth of a meter. So any distance in the real world will be represented by a distance 1/10 of that on the map.
The scale that the map has been drawn at represents actual distance. For instance: a map with a 1: 50 000 (one to fifty thousand) scale means that one centimetre measured on the map represents fifty thousand centimetres on the ground.
The numerical scale of a map represents the ratio between the distance on the map and the actual distance on the ground. For example, a scale of 1:100,000 means that 1 unit on the map represents 100,000 units on the ground. This scale helps users understand the relative distances and sizes of features on the map.
On a 1:175,000 scale map one cm on the map represents 175,000 cm on the ground. So if you walked 175,000 centimetres on the ground, you would have moved 1 centimetre on your map.
A map represents a 'birds-eye view' of the ground below.
Yes.
On a 1:175,000 scale map one cm on the map represents 175,000 cm on the ground. So if you walked 175,000 centimetres on the ground, you would have moved 1 centimetre on your map.
On a 1:175,000 scale map one cm on the map represents 175,000 cm on the ground. So if you walked 175,000 centimetres on the ground, you would have moved 1 centimetre on your map.
A map scale of 1:175,000 means that 1 centimetre on the map represents 175,000 centimetres on the ground.
A map scaled at 1:175000 means that one centimetre on the map represents 175,000 centimetres on the ground.
On a 1:175,000 scale map one cm on the map represents 175,000 cm on the ground. So if you walked 175,000 centimetres on the ground, you would have moved 1 centimetre on your map.
On a 1:175,000 scale map one cm on the map represents 175,000 cm on the ground. So if you walked 175,000 centimetres on the ground, you would have moved 1 centimetre on your map.