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Without seeing the map, this question is impossible to answer. But think of a map as a graph, the latitude relates to the X-Axis while the Longitude is analagous to the Y-Axis, so the Latitude will be what the X-Value would be and the Longitude would be the Y-Value.
So you can be told a point on a map and know where to look quickly instead of scanning the page! x
DistanceThe scale shows the relationship between the measurement between 2 points on a map, and the distance between those points in real life.E.g.A map has a scale of 1cm : 20 kmLets say that you want to travel from point A to point B, which on the map is 2.5 cm apart. All you do is look at the key to find the true distance...2.5 x 20 = 50 km
Glucose is an covalent compound and doesn't break apart like ionic compounds. so the von hoff factor is only 1 mKfi therefore 0.14 x 1.86= 0.26 lower than the original freezing point
Is it X? Brought to you by xrehabv4
It means that the marked X is the place you're heading for or where the "treasure" is at.
In the map, acquired items are marked with an "X" and unaquired items are marked with a dot.
Go to the X marked on your map and Pan for gold using it. If you don't have the map yet, you have to go upstairs in the casino and beat a game of slapjack and you will get the map as a prize.
linear meter is the distance between a point x to point Y irrespective of the elevation and bumps between them. running meter is the lenght between X AND Y considering all the elevation etc
Contour lines are used when you have spatial data, with the x,y values identifying a particular point and z is the value at that point. It could be elevation above sea level, temperature, pressure or any other measurable property. Contour lines identify where the data suggests equal values should exist. On an elevation map, contour lines show the elevation of equal values points. A 50 ft contour line would go through all points where the data suggest should be at 50 ft elevation. See related links.
Draw a circle, with centre x and radius = 25 miles (allowing for the map scale).
you see an x
Well since you didn't tell us where "point X" and "point Y" happen to be, we can't give you a correct reply. There's no way for us to look at whatever map or chart or picture you're seeing without being telepathic...
Without seeing the map, this question is impossible to answer. But think of a map as a graph, the latitude relates to the X-Axis while the Longitude is analagous to the Y-Axis, so the Latitude will be what the X-Value would be and the Longitude would be the Y-Value.
4v/ 2~5.7
4v/ 2 ~5.7
So you can be told a point on a map and know where to look quickly instead of scanning the page! x