Curved lines may be printed or drawn on any kind of map.
A Robinson Projection Map - also called an orthophanic projection in which the lines of latitude are curved. It was created by a Canadian-born cartographer named Arthur Robinson (1915 - 2004). There is also a Mollweide projection - within an ellipse in which the lines of longitude are curved. That was devised by Karl Brandan Mollweide, a German from Wolfenbuttel (1774 - 1825).
the simplest way to measure the curved lines is by using a thread...........or cloth type tape
Circles and curved lines.
At first they will use the twine to measure the curved lines and then they will take one scale and looke the measure
If the "contour interval" ... the elevation difference between lines ... is the same everywhere on the map, then the lines will be closer rogether on steep ground, and farther apart on flatter ground.
There is no kind of shape that has a straight line or curved line a kind of element of the following question is "space"...hope this helps
A kind of line which is not required to be straight. Curved lines are often called irregular lines.
They are called isobars.
Lines that is curved. E.G the outline of a circle.
Contour lines or also known as isohypses, connect points of equal elevation on a map. Contour lines can be curved, straight or a mixture of both. The lines on a map describe the intersection of a real or hypothetical surface with one or more horizontal planes.
A Robinson Projection Map - also called an orthophanic projection in which the lines of latitude are curved. It was created by a Canadian-born cartographer named Arthur Robinson (1915 - 2004). There is also a Mollweide projection - within an ellipse in which the lines of longitude are curved. That was devised by Karl Brandan Mollweide, a German from Wolfenbuttel (1774 - 1825).
Contour lines or also known as isohypses, connect points of equal elevation on a map. Contour lines can be curved, straight or a mixture of both. The lines on a map describe the intersection of a real or hypothetical surface with one or more horizontal planes.
Delicate colors and curved lines - Apex
fictional maps that don't exsist
Not really, but if you have many lines it can look like a curved shape.
elevation. the closer the lines the steeper the slope.
the lines that go up and down, south and north on a map, like the prime meridian.