Map Work O'level
Map Work O'level
Map Work O'level
A map
Uses of maps
- To locate places.
- To determine where you are going.
- To show distribution of features and type of materials.
Conventional sign
- Is a standard sign used on a map to indicate a particular feature. The conventional sign may be a
letter of the alphabet or it may be a symbol.
1. Brown: land or earth features - contours, eroded areas, prominent rock outcrops, sand areas and dunes,
secondary or gravel roads
2. Blue: water features - aqueducts, canals, furrows and siphons, coastlines, dams, lakes, marshes, swamps
and vleis, pans, rivers, water-towers
3. Green: vegetation features - cultivated fields, golf courses, nature and game reserve boundaries, state
forest boundaries, orchards and vineyards, recreation grounds, woodland
4. Black: construction features - roads, tracks, railways, buildings, bridges, cemeteries, communication
towers, dam walls, excavations and mine dumps, telephone lines, power lines, wind pumps, wrecks, ruins,
trigonometrical stations, boundaries
5. Grey: construction features - built-up areas, cadastral information.
6. Red: construction features - national, airdrome and main roads, lighthouses and marine lights; pink also
shows international boundaries
Five Elements
Scale
- A scale is the ratio of a distance between two points on a map and the actual distance of the same
two points on the ground.
1|Page
1) The Linear Scale
This is a graphical representation of the amount by which the represented reality has been reduced.
2) Ratio scale
- Ratio – 1: 50 000.
- One unit on the map is equal to 50 000 units of the same size on the ground or 2cm to represent
1km.
Distance
Direction
An approximate way of describing position of one place in relation to the direction makes use of
16 cardinal points, the four main ones being North, South, East and West
Direction is a generalised method of showing the position of one place from another i.e. points of
a compass.
Bearing
2|Page
0° is True North, bearings are always read in a clockwise direction from the North line through a
full circle of 36Oº.
Calculate the true bearing from spot height 735 to spot height 759.
a) With a pencil, draw a line parallel to the side of the map through spot height 735. (This is your
True North line Oº).
b) Join the two spot heights with a pencil line.
c) Measure (with a protractor) the angle between True North, Oº ( i.e. the line through spot height
735 and parallel to the side of the map) and line joining two spot heights.
d) The answer is 106°
Magnetic bearing
Magnetic Bearing is the distance in degrees from Magnetic North (i.e. from where the compass
points to North) to the position of the place.
The magnetic bearing between A and B is angle y = 112º
3|Page
Map Referencing / Co-ordinates
Steps
1. Locate the grid square of the particular feature to be found.
2. Read the easting for the south-west of the grid square,
3. Read the northing for the south-west of the grid square (the two lines intersect forming
an L- pattern).
4. Simply write the two numbers together, with the easting first.
5. The 4 fig of the shaded box below is: 2 9 5 1
4|Page
Finding 6 Figure Grid References
It is used for precise locations
It pinpoints actual location by involving the subdivision of the eastings and northings
reference into 10 imaginary lines.
Each tiny square represents 1/100 of the original big (grid) square.
Steps
1. Locate the grid square of the particular feature to be found.
2. Divide the grid square into 10 equal parts along both the northings and eastings.
3. Number these divisions from 0 to 9 along both northings and eastings.
4. Mark the southwest corner of the feature that you are locating.
5. Estimate how far the feature is from the easting first using the scale in tenths.
6. Estimate how far the feature is from the northing using the scale in tenths.
7. Write the value for the easting followed by the northing.
8. The six fig grid reference of the spot height below is: 6 2 5 3 3 3
Note:
The third number is part of the easting and the sixth number is part of the northing.
These numbers refer to the small squares in tenths.
Accuracy of 6 figure grid reference depends on subdiving the parts equally and ensuring
that the (dotted) lines are parallel to the grid lines.
5|Page
65 or 66. Now include that small 4 then write down the normal easting and you will have
your first 3 figures for the eastings.
Now the last 3 figures are computed in the similar way we computed the former 6 figure
grid reference.
4 6 5 0 0 0
We are aware that our grid box has an equivalent length of 1000m, and we can divide it
into 10 segments 100m and each 100m segment can be divided into 10 segments 10m each
and each 10 m segment into segments 1m.
So as you are moving from the main easting into the grid box to a feature you will have
written your small easting as well as the main easting and the fourth figure is obtained by
seeing how many hundreds of meters the feature lies from the main easting, the fifth is how
many tenths of units and the 6th how many units.
Here the usual result can be 465300. The last two zeroes are there because it's not possible
to measure the distance of a normal 1:50000 topo map.
4 6 5 3 0 0
For the northings, you will notice that they start with a double digit alongside that we used
to identify as the normal northing.
6|Page
Copy the four numbers and add three zeroes at the end and you will have 13 figure grid
reference.
5 1 5 6 0 0 0
5 1 5 6 8 0 0
Height
Height on all maps and photos is shown in metres above sea level.
On the topographical map, the contour interval i.e. the vertical distance between 2 contour lines is
20 metres.
On the orthophoto map, the contour interval is 5 metres.
Height is used to show the following:
Height is shown on maps in various ways – always in metres above sea level i.e. as altitude.
Contour lines.
Spot heights.
Trigonometrical beacons.
Bench marks
Gradient
This is the steepness of a slope, and is represented as a ratio e.g. 1 : 50, 1 : 500.
The smaller the number, the steeper the slope.
7|Page
VI = Highest height - Lowest height - always in metres
HE = Measure the distance between the 2 points in cms, and convert to metres.
Divide the top answer by itself, divide the bottom answer by the top. +The answer is a ratio i.e. no
units must be given.
Example 1:
Calculate the average gradient from Trig Beacon 96 to Spot Height 447.
Finding Area
The formula for the area of a rectangle is length x width (i.e. the length of one long side multiplied
by the length of one short side).
give your answer in either square metres (m2) or square kilometres (km2
Remember to convert your map distances to real distances before you multiply.
W
Area of irregular shape
Follow the rule that parts of a square are to be counted if they are half or more than half occupied,
but are to be ignored if less than half.
Count the number of occupied squares and multiply the total by 1𝑘𝑚2 .
8|Page
Cross-Sections
It is a diagram showing change in height along a line drawn between two or more points on a map.
On this strip of paper mark off each contour line you cross and indicate its height.
The positions of the two Trig. Beacons and any major features such as rivers should be noted.
Draw a horizontal and vertical axis and on the vertical axis put a scale of 1cm =20m.
Make your bottom line one contour interval lower than the lowest height on your strip of paper,
i.e. lowest height is 1620m, therefore your bottom point on your vertical scale is 1600m.
Place your strip of paper along the bottom line and move it up keeping your starting point on the
vertical axis. When the first height on your piece of paper corresponds with the same height on the
vertical axis, mark its position with a dot. Now repeat this for each height on your strip of paper.
9|Page
Join these dots (by freehand) to complete your cross-section.
Vertical Exaggeration
This is used as the vertical scale must be exaggerated because, if the horizontal scale were used for
the vertical, the relief would show as an almost flat line on a cross-section.
VE = 1: 2 000
1: 50 000
1 1
VE = 2000 ÷ 50000
VE = 25 times
10 | P a g e
TOPIC 11
1. Illustrating Data
Information is usually given in numerical form and you are asked to present the
information in the form of a diagram.
Questions may be specific as to the data presentation method one should use or be
general on the technique
There are numerous techniques which are most common: i) Bar graphs, ii) Pie charts,
iii) Line and Bar graphs, iv) Popn Pyramids,
Pie Charts / Devided Circles
These are circles drawn to represent various portions of given data. The data should be
one whole, segmented into various components.
Method of Construction
These are bars drawn proportional to the data given in numerical form. The data can be
one whole or unrelated.
The bars should be of equal with but the length will vary according to the values.
The spacing of the bars should be consistent
Method of Construction
11 | P a g e
Example June 2015 No. 4bi)
A bar graph showing production of electricity from two major source in five countries by
percentage in 1995
120
100
80
60
Thermal
40
HEP
20
Countries
Line Graph
Is a graphical representation of data which uses a line to join the points of the data being
represented.
Four types of line graphs - Simple line graph, compound line graph, group line graph,
convergent line graph.
12 | P a g e
Make a population pyramid graph from the following data
Simply plot males on one side and females on the other with each row of the graph representing
one of the columns of data. On the X axis you start with 0 in the centre and write marks on
either side of it.
Age 0-4 5-9 10 15- 20- 25- 30- 35- 40- 45- 50- 55- 60+
14 19 24 29 34 39 44 49 54 59
Male 6000 5000 4000 3700 3500 3400 3200 3100 3000 2800 2400 2000 1700
Fem 6000 5800 4500 4200 4000 3900 3700 3600 3500 3200 3000 2500 2200
ale
2. Trends
A trend is a pattern of gradual change in a condition. It is also known as a general
tendency of a series of data points.
The information is given in diagram or table form
Questions usually seek pupils to describe and explain the trends given
Describing Trends
13 | P a g e
This refers to data which is continuous
Break up the graph into manageable units
Precision is called for ie specify period you are referring to
Pick up the unusual
Use verbs to describe, for example
Verbs To Describe an Up Movement: Increase, Rise, Rocket, Goes up
Adverbs describe how something happens. They show the speed at which a trend is
moving :
Fast Movements (Steep): Sharply, Rapidly, Quickly, Steeply
Other Words
Fluctuation
14 | P a g e
*changes in introduction (what’s new)
*changes in removal (what has been replaced)
*changes in position (where was it and where is it now)
Example June 2015 No. 3b
From 1700 to 1750 the highest percentage employment was in the primary sector and
the lowest was in the tertiary sector.
From 1750 to 1850 primary sector employment was decreasing moderately whilst
secondary sector employment was increasing moderately until it had the highest
percentage employment in 1820.
From 1850 primary sector employment continues to decrease gradually until in 1920
where it had the lowest percentage employment
Tertiary sector employment increased sharply from 1920 as secondary employment
decreased up to 2000
Tertiary had the highest percentage employment from 1920 and it reached its peak in
2000
15 | P a g e
Reasons (Explanation)
In photographs you should state all the geographical themes present in the photo
In simpler terms list everything in the photo, specifying their location using photograph
terms
The photograph terms are illustrated below:
Sky
Left Background Central Background Right Background
Left Middle Ground Central Middle Ground Right Middle Ground
Left Foreground Central Foreground Right Foreground
The sky is as it appears in the photograph. State the cloud cover and the cloud type
Divide the rest of the photograph, below the sky, into three equal horizontal units
The bottom part is the foreground, it is the part nearest to the camera
The part immediately below the sky is the background. It is the part furthest from the
camera
The middle ground is literally the central part, the area between the background and
the foreground
Then generally the left hand side and the right hand side are parts as well which you
should use to locate features in a photograph
The sky is not the background, but it is a unique part which should be described
separately
NB: Be detailed. Even show differences in color, height, shape of trees etc
16 | P a g e
There are lots of people in the pavements of the buildings and some are crossing the
road
There is a street light on the central left part
On the same side there are electric power lines
There is a highland at the background
The sky is clear
5. Distribution And Density
Many, concentrated, a lot of, highest number, dense, Few, less, lowest number, sparse e.g.
June 2015 No. 8
Least number of people along major rivers such as Luangwa and Kafue rivers
Also very few people to the central northern parts close to the Tan-Zam railway line
Sparse rural is the most widespread throughout Zambia
Population is dense in urban centers such as Lusaka, Kituwe and Ndola
There are a lot of people in its border town with Zimbabwe on the south most parts of
Tan-Zam railway
Population is also concentrated in rural areas near Lake Tanganyika and the central
parts of Zambia
There are also many people in the rural areas south east of the map along the
international boundary
Reasons (Explanation)
17 | P a g e
To describe a diagram try to make sense out of the information given in diagram form
.
It is a personal interpretation of the information in the diagram
Pupils should just lift information from the diagram to their answer sheet , substituting
words or expanding information where they can
Two kinds of questions are asked here :
i)those that require information in the diagram only.
ii) those that are open i. e pupils are allowed to include extra information
NB: Never Use Previous Knowledge Where The Question Specifies That “Using Information
In The Diagram Only”
Family poverty
Shortage food
Drinking unprotected water
Prevalence of diseases
Malnutrition
Example November 2014 No.4bii)
18 | P a g e