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You first measure the distance between the points as shown on the map, then you compare that measurement with the map scale.
no, they form a compound
Yes. The US has 48 contiguous states (states next to each other) and two that are not contiguous, Hawaii and Alaska.
First, look on the map to find the line of latitude that the coordinates reference. If the exact line of latitude isn't shown on the map, estimate it by looking at the lines that are available. Then look on the map to find the longitude line that the coordinates reference. Once you have found the two lines, follow them both towards the point where they intersect. That is the location the coordinates reference.
To convert map measurements to actual distance, measure the scale distance on the map and multiply by the denominator of the scale (the larger number in the ratio). e.g. two cm on a 1:25000 map equals 2x25000 = 50,000 cm or 500 meters.
It is shown by the scale in centimeters
Lanthanides and Actinides.
Sierra Nevada and Klamath
The Gobi Desert and the Taklamakan Desert are the two major deserts in China.
Look at a map.
Alaska and Hawaii
There are two ways a map can show elevation. A map can use different colors to represent each elevation. The other option is to use contour lines.
Beachs Coast Dimension Weather (Tropical Zone and Temperate)
Countries on a map are usually different colours and National borderlines are always indicated.
Scientist combine the symbols for different elements when they write chemical formulas.
man what is the answer
man what is the answer