Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q357674> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 20 of
20
with 100 triples per page.
- Q357674 subject Q6528153.
- Q357674 subject Q8607206.
- Q357674 abstract "Hachures /ˈhæʃʊərz/ are an older mode of representing relief. They show orientation of slope, and by their thickness and overall density they provide a general sense of steepness. Being non-numeric, they are less useful to a scientific survey than contours, but can successfully communicate quite specific shapes of terrain. They are a form of shading, although different from the one used in shaded maps.Hachure representation of relief was standardized by the Austrian topographer Johann Georg Lehmann in 1799. Hachures may be combined with other ways of representing relief, like shades, the result being a shaded hachure map; an example of such a map is the Dufour Map of Switzerland. Emil von Sydow designed maps with coloured hachures: green for lowlands and brown for highlands.".
- Q357674 thumbnail First_Manassas_map2.jpg?width=300.
- Q357674 wikiPageExternalLink oss42.htm.
- Q357674 wikiPageExternalLink gis_hachuretxt.pdf.
- Q357674 wikiPageExternalLink mapmenu.htm.
- Q357674 wikiPageExternalLink grw64.htm.
- Q357674 wikiPageWikiLink Q1191981.
- Q357674 wikiPageWikiLink Q123786.
- Q357674 wikiPageWikiLink Q17341992.
- Q357674 wikiPageWikiLink Q351179.
- Q357674 wikiPageWikiLink Q355730.
- Q357674 wikiPageWikiLink Q39.
- Q357674 wikiPageWikiLink Q6528153.
- Q357674 wikiPageWikiLink Q70286.
- Q357674 wikiPageWikiLink Q8607206.
- Q357674 comment "Hachures /ˈhæʃʊərz/ are an older mode of representing relief. They show orientation of slope, and by their thickness and overall density they provide a general sense of steepness. Being non-numeric, they are less useful to a scientific survey than contours, but can successfully communicate quite specific shapes of terrain.".
- Q357674 label "Hachure map".
- Q357674 depiction First_Manassas_map2.jpg.