cartographically การใช้
- This dispute was settled through a compromise, which was sealed in a bilateral delimitation cartographically.
- Since 1991, the peninsula has been investigated by the team of ETH Z黵ich geologically and cartographically.
- Opponents of Mercator ( not Crane ) accuse him of helping Europeans to feel cartographically blessed, justifying themselves in then assuming and perpetuating their imperial role.
- Some historians believe the legend of " Antillia " was first insinuated cartographically in the 1367 portolan of the Venetian brothers Domenico and Francesco Pizzigano.
- Its main goal is not to depict a cartographically exact depiction of the world and its continents, but to illustrate the primitive Diaspora of the Apostles.
- The aim of this map was not to represent the world cartographically, but to serve as an illustration of the Apostles Diaspora in the first decades of Christianity.
- On the other hand, Quintyn ( 2010 ) points out that some authors believe the classification was based upon geographical distribution, being cartographically based, and not hierarchical.
- Through brief presentations and extended discussions, participants explored innovative ways of visualising cultural and linguistic diversity and shared appropriate techniques and tools for representing endangerment, both cartographically and geospatially.
- The one I bought from the tourist office in the Tuscan hill town of San Gimignano was a doozy _ pretty to look at, but obviously drawn by someone who was cartographically challenged.
- If the Weimar map were truly made in 1424, then it would be the first map to depict Antillia cartographically ( or at least place it on an equal footing with the 1424 nautical map of Zuane Pizzigano ).
- Although numerous sources show the river originating directly at Henderson Lake, per the U . S . Geological Survey ( USGS ), the river cartographically begins at the confluence of Indian Pass Brook and Calamity Brook near the outlet of Henderson Lake in Newcomb, in the Adirondack Park.
- Between 1928 and 1940, as part of comprehensive programmes to educate ( and politically influence ) Uzbek people, who for the first time now had their own cartographically delineated ( administrative ) region, Uzbek writing was switched to Latin script ( Yanalif; a proposal for the latinization of Yana imla was already developed in 1924 ).