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Not necessarily but yes, it can be. A contour interval is the difference in elevation between successive contours, while a vertical interval is the distance between any two contours. So yeah, it can be the same sometimes.
The contour lines on a map indicate changes in elevation above sea level (or below, occasionally). The amount of change in elevation between lines is shown on the map legend, and will vary depending on the size of the map and the type of terrain.
That depends on which Contour Map. The contour interval is the height difference between two adjacent contours on your map. The contours probably go up in 500 metre steps if it's a big volcano, so your contour interval is 500 metres.
contour interval
A contour interval shows a change in elevation on a topographical map. If the contour interval is 20 then the elevation change between two contour lines is 20 meters
Not necessarily but yes, it can be. A contour interval is the difference in elevation between successive contours, while a vertical interval is the distance between any two contours. So yeah, it can be the same sometimes.
Two successive index contours on a map would be 5 meters apart. The interval is how far apart two contour lines are, so since the contour interval is 5 meters the answer is 5 meters.
The difference between the successive values on a scale is an interval.
Contours show the elevation above sea level. The steeper the slope the closer the contour lines. Therefore, on a low elevation the contours will be far apart.
The height between contours is usually stated in the map's legend. For instance, on an Ordnance Survey (UK) 1:50 000 Landranger Series, contours are at 10 metres vertical interval.
the elevation difference between two adjacent contour lines.
The contour lines on a map indicate changes in elevation above sea level (or below, occasionally). The amount of change in elevation between lines is shown on the map legend, and will vary depending on the size of the map and the type of terrain.
That depends on which Contour Map. The contour interval is the height difference between two adjacent contours on your map. The contours probably go up in 500 metre steps if it's a big volcano, so your contour interval is 500 metres.
The definition of a contour interval is the difference in elevation between two consecutive lines.
Contour interval.
Interval
The Contour Interval.