1.1.7

Describing Routes

Test yourself

Describing routes

We can describe a route in detail using the different features of an OS map.

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Locations

  • Grid references can give the start and finish locations of a walk, e.g. a meeting point in a car park.
  • Symbol recognition would allow you to include buildings and features of the land to help give directions, e.g. PH as a public house on an OS map.
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Directions

  • The scale can instruct the reader to walk a certain distance, e.g. follow the path for 500 m.
  • Compass directions let the reader know which direction to go in, e.g. follow the track that heads in a south-easterly direction so as to reach the footpath.
  • Contour lines allow a description of the steepness of a road or path. They would also indicate a dangerous cliff.
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Example

  • Map skills can be easily combined to form directions of a route.
    • For example, starting at the car park at 678359, walk on a public footpath up a gentle slope in a south-easterly direction for 400 m.
    • At the youth hostel, take to minor road westwards for 1 km to the castle, a National Trust property.

Jump to other topics

1Geography Skills

2Geology of the UK

3Geography of the World

4Development

5Weather & Climate

6The World of Work

7Natural Resources

8Rivers

9Coasts

10Glaciers

11Tectonics

12Climate Change

13Global Population & Inequality

14Urbanisation

15Ecosystems

16Life in an Emerging Country

17Analysis of Africa

18Analysis of India

19Analysis of the Middle East

20Analysis of Bangladesh

21Analysis of Russia

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