The Mason-Dixon Line is the state border separating Maryland and West Virginia from Pennsylvania and Delaware. It is commonly known in the United States as the dividing line between the North and the South. However, it was actually used to separate British colonies in America during Colonial times.
i don't
but can tell you that its final & purely conventional configuration
at the end of compulsory segregation in the 1960s
is generally considered to have followed the northern borders of Delaware Maryland west Virginia Kentucky Missouri Oklahoma & west Texas
& a more recent map is not likely to be any different or any better than a map created at that time
tho it is true that there were several entirely distinct so called mason dixon lines situated in varying locations & having different meanings at different times
Mason Dixon Line
On the London Underground map, the Circle Line is coloured yellow.
During WWII, the demarcation line (or green line, as it was drawed in green on the map), was the limit between the northern and western part of France, occupied by German troops, and the "free zone" which was not occupied. The demarcation line disappeared in Nov. 1942 when the Germans decided to occupy all of France.
No Poland is not landlocked It's coast line is towards the north of the country. Here is a map http://atschool.eduweb.co.uk/chatback/images/europe.gif
The Boundary and Borders of the western lands were ill defined with competing claims that took no small effort to negotiate final settlement. For example Virginia clained the lower left hand corner of Pennsylvania until 1780. Maryland claimed much of southern Pennsylvania until the Mason Dixon line was established in 1767. Connecticut had a claim on northern Pennsylvania until 1786. Pennsylvania had a claim on much of eastern New York until 1774. The final shift was the purchase of the Lake Erie Triangle from New York in 1792. Lake Erie existed but who it belonged to and at what point the final map would be drawn was in dispute for many years. Neat lines drawn on a map such as those in the four corners region were not readily available with the surveying technology available in early Colonial America. The DelMarVa peninsula is an excellent example of political expediency as opposed to good cartography. The founding fathers desperately needed a good GPS system.
Here is a link to a map http://www.sonofthesouth.net/slavery/slave-maps/mason-dixon-line.htm
The Mason Dixon line is a line on a map and nothing more. So, it didn't take time to complete.
Mason-Dixon Line
Mason Dixon Line
The Mason-Dixon Line. Surveyed between 1763 and 1767 by Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon in the resolution of a border dispute between British colonies in Colonial America. It forms a demarcation line between four U.S. states, forming part of the borders of Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware, and West Virginia (then part of Virginia).
There's the actual, historical boundary line surveyed by Mason and Dixon, and then there's what people think of when they use the term "Mason-Dixon Line", as a shorthand for the boundary between slave states and free states. This is not entirely accurate though, because the line has Delaware and New Jersey on the "free" side, whereas Delaware was a slave state and there was still very small-scale slavery in New Jersey until after the Civil War, when slavery was ended everywhere by the 13th Amendment. Additionally, when the line was surveyed Pennsylvania still had slavery, though Pennsylvania is on the "free" side too. People THINK of the Mason-Dixon line as being between Maryland and Delaware, so the eastern end of it is thought to be at the Atlantic Ocean, where the common border of those states meet the sea. But Mason and Dixon were hired to do the surveying to settle boundary disputes between Maryland, Pennsylvania, and the three counties that became Delaware which at that time were a part of Pennsylvania, though they had previously been part of the original grant of Maryland. In essence the three counties that are Delaware were granted twice - first to Maryland, then later again to Pennsylvania. This naturally made Maryland unhappy. So part of the job for which Mason and Dixon were hired was to locate the boundary between Maryland and what was to become Delaware. But they did not start at the ocean. If you look at a map, the southern boundary of Delaware is a line running inland from the sea, straight west. Then, the boundary makes a ninety degree turn and runs straight north. It was this north-south running line that was the easternmost portion of the surverying work done by Mason and Dixon. So in actual fact the end of the line surveyed by Mason and Dixon is at that ninety degree corner at the southwestern corner of Delaware, not at the sea.
North American continent, United States of America.There's always been some disagreement as to the exact location of the dividing lines. It's generally accepted that the East-West line divides Maryland, Pennsylvania and part of West Virginia, and the North-South line divides Maryland and Delaware. OR SIMPLY...1. Mason Dixon Line: A stone-made line that separates the Middle colonies from the Southern colonies.
The effect was Charles Manson and Jeramiah Dixon were hired to map a dividing line of the colonies.
The driving distance between Davenport IA and Dixon IA is 23 miles per Map Quest. The driving time per Map Quest is 31 minutes.
A blue line on a map is a lake ,river , or body of water
Water represents a blue line on a map.
The blue line on a map usually represents a stream of water!