the further apart the gentler the slope
The land is relatively flat.
A contour interval of 20 meters means that each contour line on the map represents a change in elevation of 20 meters. These contour lines help to visualize the shape and steepness of the terrain. The closer the contour lines are together, the steeper the terrain, while further apart lines indicate a gentler slope.
Evenly spaced contour lines mean a steady slope, uphill or downhill.
Closely spaced contour lines mean that the slope is steep.
If the contour lines on a topographic map are close together, that area is a steep slope. If the contours have wide spaces in between then the terrain is relatively flat. Many close contour lines mean the elevation is changing rapidly while sparse contour lines mean elevation changes very little.
The land is relatively flat.
A contour interval of 20 meters means that each contour line on the map represents a change in elevation of 20 meters. These contour lines help to visualize the shape and steepness of the terrain. The closer the contour lines are together, the steeper the terrain, while further apart lines indicate a gentler slope.
Evenly spaced contour lines mean a steady slope, uphill or downhill.
Closely spaced contour lines mean that the slope is steep.
If the contour lines on a topographic map are close together, that area is a steep slope. If the contours have wide spaces in between then the terrain is relatively flat. Many close contour lines mean the elevation is changing rapidly while sparse contour lines mean elevation changes very little.
elevation above mean sea level
On a topographic map when the contour numbers get bigger that means your going up in elevation. The closer the contour lines are together, the steeper the slope is.
An isoline is a contour line that portays elevation in terms of slopes, pits, and peaks. A contour map, such as a topographic map, shows hills, valleys, and the steepness of various slopes.
One contour can not cross another because a contour is one exact elevation; if it crossed another contour it would show that it is higher than the second contour on one side, but lower on the other side.
If the contour lines on a topographic map are close together, that area is a steep slope. If the contours have wide spaces in between then the terrain is relatively flat. Many close contour lines mean the elevation is changing rapidly.
Contour lines cannot overlap because each line represents a specific elevation on the terrain. If contour lines were to overlap, it would imply that a particular point has multiple elevations, which is not possible. Contour lines must always represent a single and distinct elevation value.
Acontour line (also level set, isopleth, isoline, isogram or isarithm) of a function of two variables is a curve along which the function has a constant value.[1] In cartography, a contour line (often just called a "contour") joins points of equal elevation (height) above a given level, such as mean sea level.[2] A contour map is a map illustrated with contour lines, for example a topographic map, which thus shows valleys and hills, and the steepness of slopes.[3] The contour interval of a contour map is the difference in elevation between successive contour lines.[4] A contour interval is basically the same thing.