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There will be several dark lines on a map, illustrating roads, power lines etc, BUT you probably mean contour lines. These are lines of equal altitude and are usually coloured brown for land, or blue for snow or ice fields.
We find soil rarely in deserts but it is of colour brown and it is often cracked coz of the hotness.
A Topographic Map includes contour lines drawn to represent changes in elevation.The most important thing to remember is that CLOSE contour lines mean STEEP terrain and OPEN contour lines mean FLAT terrain.
It is more likely to mean a desert or arid area. The legend on the map will give you the precise level of flora in the area.
In New Zealand, the contour lines on land are brown, except those for glaciers and so on which are blue. I think the lines for lake bed are blue also, but don't have an example to hand.
Brown lines
Brown is commonly used on maps to represent relief features such as mountains, hills, and other elevated landforms. It is typically used to indicate areas of higher elevation or terrain changes.
On a map, longitude lines go up and down, AKA vertically. Latitude lines are horizontal lines on a map.
There will be several dark lines on a map, illustrating roads, power lines etc, BUT you probably mean contour lines. These are lines of equal altitude and are usually coloured brown for land, or blue for snow or ice fields.
Blue on a map usually denotes water. Blue lines could be streams and rivers.
The black lines mean it is a state boundary.
It means that it's a moutain
Brown usually means desert.
Brown usually means desert.
Maybe forests, deserts, or mountains
A Topographic Map includes contour lines drawn to represent changes in elevation.The most important thing to remember is that CLOSE contour lines mean STEEP terrain and OPEN contour lines mean FLAT terrain.
We find soil rarely in deserts but it is of colour brown and it is often cracked coz of the hotness.