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Yes... Go to http://www.discovernorthernireland.com/Titanic-Route-Map-A1514
The Silk Road allowed the the Kushan empire to trade products from the Greco-Roman world, China and India.-----There is no specific number of routes in the Silk Road.It had many routes, some with more than one course, and many side routes. Counting them would probably require defining what constituted a route with more detail than is objectively possible. That having been said, a few of the important routes can be listed.Land routes included the following:Coastal China to MongoliaMongolia to Eastern IndiaDifferent routes from Mongolia to Persia via AfghanistanAfghanistan to Western IndiaPersia to PalestineThere were also sea routes, including the following:China to JavaChina to BurmaChina to IndiaBurma to IndiaEast coast of India to west coastIndia to ArabiaArabia to Coastal AfricaArabia to EgyptEgypt to PalestinePalestine to Egypt and the Upper NilePalestine to Constantinople and RomeThere were other routes as well, such as one that went to Armenia and north from there. And there were probably routes that are not really known or studied.There is a link below to a map showing these routes, and a link to an article on the Silk Road.
One can find a map of Sweden in an atlas which can be bought at a bookstore or can be found at a local library. There are also hundreds of websites which have maps from all over the world.
a road map shows roads highways and specific highways
To show a highway or road on a map, you will see it just shows a thinish or thickish line. That's what a highway,or road should look like on a map that you will look at and see.
All planimetric maps show roads, but a road map is not planimetric (unless its like a real crappy map)
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i think that washington dc is the answer but i am not shore
A link to a map of the Great Ocean Road can be found at the related link below.
To show a highway or road on a map, you will see it just shows a thinish or thickish line. That's what a highway,or road should look like on a map that you will look at and see.
The Silk Road extended from Southern Europe through Arabia, Egypt, Persia, India till it reached China. It connected the Roman empire and the Chinese empires. See the related link below for a map.
No Africa is not a part of Silk Road, Pakistan is part of Silk Road ----- There were parts of the Silk Road that went through Africa. The Silk Road was not actually a road, but a network of transportation routes running from southern China, and other areas in the East, to Europe. The land routes went through central Asia and crossed Persia and Turkey. But there were sea routes, and one of these went around India and to the Red Sea, where one possible route was to cross to the Nile, travel down the Nile to the Mediterranean Sea, and cross to Europe from there. The sea routes became more important whenever the land routes were unsafe. The Silk Road was also not just for silk, but for spices, and some of these came from farther south in Africa, so some branches of the Silk Road went there. There were also branches to Indonesia. There is a link below to an article with a map showing different Silk Road routes.
No it doesn't show elevation. I was looking for it too but it doesnt seem like it to me.
A road map presentation is one that illustrates the steps necessary to accomplish a goal in a detailed navigation list to show direction and distance to the desired endpoint.
TOPO MAPS: They can help get a feeling for the geography in a certaint area (Ex: Rocky, Flat, ETC,). It also shows roads, so it can function as both. ROAD MAPS: Exactly what the name states. It show roads that can provide help if lost or to check where you are.