Floɯers Mαp.
Three Goblin Art
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Not today Justin
Game of Thrones Daily
trying on a metaphor

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AnasAbdin

izzy's playlists!
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pixel skylines
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
i don't do bad sauce passes

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祝日 / Permanent Vacation

Kaledo Art
DEAR READER
Cosimo Galluzzi

roma★
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

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@fuckyeahcartography
Floɯers Mαp.
15 overlay maps that will change the way you see the world
Norway, Sweden, Finland. Pergamon World Atlas by Polish Army Topography Service (1967)
Continuing on with #GlobeFacts Belgium IV Belgium has been producing chocolate for almost 400 years – the first evidence of chocolate production in Belgium dates back to 1635 Today Belgium produces over 173,000 tons of the stuff a year, and has an estimated 2,000 chocolate shops Antwerp is the world’s diamond capital – with an estimated annual turnover of more than EUR 20 billion, around three times more than the next competitor (US). Diamonds have been traded here since 1447, and today the city handles more than 80 percent of the world’s rough diamonds and 50 percent of all cut diamonds The Flemish jeweller Lodewyk van Bercken is credited to inventing the first pear cut diamond and the polishing wheel (scaif), which uses diamond dust to cut diamonds to achieve greater precision and more complex cuts. His statue can be seen near Antwerp’s diamond district Napoleon’s bid for European domination ended at the Battle of Waterloo in Belgium – after conquering much of continential Europe in the early 19th century, French military leader and emperor Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated in 1815 by allied forces, ending the Napoleonic era of European history, the Napoleonic Wars and Napoleon’s Hundred Days’ reign Continued tomorrow with more #BelgiumFacts Pictured : Isis painting an 80cm Galileo in Mint Green | www.bellerbyandco.com #Globemakers
North Pole
from a German School Atlas [1888] reprinted 1912
The Best Places to Read a Book in Manhattan by Jason Polan
Map lamps by WhimsyHome on Etsy
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This colourful map, A Chart of the History of Printing in Europe, by R. T. Aitchison, was printed in 1931. Printer’s marks are included, as well as different types (and mermaids and sea monsters!).
You can see more about printing history in relation to geography here.
Is that 1742 next to Glasgow? The first printer here was in 1638…
You are correct. Nice spotting! The first book printed in Glasgow was The protestation of the Generall Assemblie of the Church of Scotland, and of the noblemen, barons, gentlemen, borrowes, ministers and commons, printed by George Anderson in 1638. Anderson worked in Glasgow until his death in 1647.
Luis Toledo
mapsontheweb
Gazing towards Europe, from the Horn of Africa, 1938
The shrinking of the Arctic ice sheet in the upcoming 10th edition of the National Geographic Atlas of the World is one of the most striking changes in the publication’s history, geographers say.
“The biggest visible change other than the breakup of the U.S.S.R.”
As the ocean heats up due to global warming, Arctic sea ice has been locked in a downward spiral. Since the late 1970s, the ice has retreated by 12 percent per decade, worsening after 2007, according to NASA. May 2014 represented the third lowest extent of sea ice during that month in the satellite record.
Melting ice and sea level rise has changed the world’s map.
A map of Slovakia based on patterns of embroideries used typically.
The Plan to Build a Mega-Manhattan That Failed, Thank God
The Kiss of the oceans - postcard from 1923
a plan of the city and liberties of london showing the extent of the dreadful conflagration in the year 1666 - published 1772
Portion of Emmanual Bowen’s map entitled: A complete map of the Southern Continent : survey’d by Cap’t. Abel Tasman & depicted by order of the East India Company in Holland in the Stadt House at Amsterdam. (1744)
On this day, 2 December 1642, a party of Abel Tasman’s crew became the first Europeans to set foot on Van Diemen’s Land (now Tasmania) at Storm Bay (now Adventure Bay).
Abel Janszoon Tasman was instructed to command expeditions to the southern and eastern seas in 1642-43 and 1644 by Anthony van Diemen, Governor General of the Dutch East Indies. On his first voyage to find new markets, travelling in the ships Heemskerck and Zeehaen, Tasman charted Tasmania, the west coast of New Zealand, the Tonga and Fiji island groups, and the north coast of New Guinea.
Tasman’s journal describes the events of the day: “That they had heard certain human sounds and also sounds nearly resembling the music of a trump or a small gong not far from them though they had seen no one.” The party also noticed dense smoke rising from the land and reported that they had seen notches in trees 5 feet apart, concluding that the place was inhabited by people of extraordinary stature.
The full journal of the first voyage was lost, but two abridged versions survived. The Huijdecoper manuscript, one of these versions, is an extract copy and is held in the Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales.
Argentine climates [1701×2722]