A Guide To Camping & Wilderness Survival

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Pictomaps


A pictomap is a map on which photographic imagery of a standard photomosaic has been converted into interpretable colors and symbols.

b. The components of the pictomap consist of three basic color tones photographically extracted from a photomosaic, masked and drafted symbols, and names data. At the large scales used for city maps (1:5,000 to 1:12,500) the light tones and shadows on the photographic image serve to delineate many of the map features. At scales of 1:25,000 and 1:50,000, however, most planimetric features are shown by drafted symbols, printed in specified colors.

c. Tones. The three basic color tones used for area features are as follows:

(1) Landtone, a buff-like color tone which represents uncovered earth.

(2) Vegetone, green tones which represent densities of vegetation.

(3) Shadowtone, a black-green tone which represents shades and shadows.

d. Symbols. The following pictomap symbols are different from the standard large-scale symbols shown in figures 1 through 242:

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Index Index

Scope
Drainage Features
Relief Features
Vegetation Features
Coastal Hydrography
Roads in the United States on Large- and Medium-Scale Maps
Roads in Foreign Areas on Large-and Medium-Scale Maps
Roads on Small-Scale Maps
Related Road Features
Railroads
Features Related to Communications
Buildings and Populated Places on Large-Scale Maps
Buildings and Populated Places on Medium- and Small-Scale Maps
Industrial and Public Works
Control Points and Elevations
Boundaries
Joint Operations Graphics
Pictomaps
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