Atlas of USA

Atlas Road Map Knowledge Base

Could someone tell me a good road atlas/map for driving around spain? Me and my grandma are going to spain this next summer and driving and need a good map. Please point me to one or tell me one if you know. Wow dragon, that was like the most retarded answer ever. I said a road atlas/map, not a map that's on my computer. What are we supposed to go on google maps while we're driving around?
What is the best road map/atlas software on the market? I have been thinking of becoming a courier with my own truck and if I do I know GPS is the best thing to get but up until I can afford it, what is the best software you can buy for getting door to door directions. I need something that I don't have to be internet accessible to use. I just want to type some addresses into my laptop and be ready to go. Is there any software of this nature and if there is, what is the best? Thanks.
Which should I buy a road atlas or road map or what? I'm confused on which one would be more effective for a new driver.
Can anyone tell me where I can get a USA road map SHOWING where gas stations are on the highways? AM going to be traveling across country in my car next month and would like to get a road atlas or USA road map of service/gas station locations across the usa highway.....I would appreciate any help or advice you can give me.....Thank you for your time....
How can I find out the elevations of areas not listed on road maps/Atlas? Need to find out small communities' elevations within the state of Kansas.
USA street directory/road maps/atlas? Hi, I'm from Australia and will be doing a road trip through California, Arizona and Nevada. In Australia we have Melways, which is a state wide street directory, showing all roads, highways etc. Am curious to know what the equivalent is in America, especially the 3 states I am visiting. I'm hoping i can purchase just the street directory/road map/road atlas etc instead of purchasing a GPS system as quite honestly they drive me bonkers. Thanks
Which is the best atlas or map for driving in the Netherlands? I am going on holiday at Easter, near the Holland, Germany border and I need a good road atlas to help. Any suggestions ?
Where can I find a map of India with specific features? I'm looking for a map of India that shows the country, showing the river Indus, the river Ganges and the the surrounding countries. I'd prefer it to be similar to a map in an atlas, and not a road map and so on.
What is the best road atlas for france? I was going to get the AA 2008 one, but I have read a bad review which says it is only good for the motorways, the smaller roads are not mapped out so well. Thanks in advance!
Where can I find this road map book? I used to have this book (kinda like an atlas but with out the actual maps) that listed in order what exits were where while driving on the highways. In the book the exits were in order as you drove. As well as it listing the exit, it listed everything that was at that particular exit (Resteraunts, Restrooms, Lodging, Gas Stations) Im driving from Ohio to Florida with 4 kids in a few months so I would really like to purchase another book like this but I cant find it anywhere. Does anyone know what this book is and where I might be able to find it?
TomTom map of Spain/Portugal? I have a TomTom 510 satnav which comes with GB plus major roads of Western Europe maps. By the look of things, I can get around major roads in Spain, but not navigate direct to, for example, postcodes in Spain. Has anyone used the Spain/Portugal map? Is it good value for £29.99? Or would I be better of with what I've got and a road atlas of Spain? The confounding problem is that I will be doing most of the driving and my partner is unable to read road maps while the car is moving as it makes her feel sick.
good atlas for driving across Canada? I'm looking for a really good atlas that shows parks and campgrounds in canada. Good detail, shows back roads etc... I'm driving across canada any suggestions on an atlas/map to use? Thanks!
What should I buy for driving? Should I buy a street guide, folded map, paper map, or a road atlas to help me improve my driving skills I need help with this and if you have any other ideas that would be great. Oh I already have a gps device looking for other options. Gps is not reliable im looking for other means to improve my sense of direction on the road.
I cannot find McCallum Texas and the zip code on the map.? I know it exists because I have a Uncle and cousins that live there. It's souposed to be right on the Mexican Border. I looked in my Rand McNally Road Atlas. It's not there.
Where can I find an atlas of Mexico and with routes all labeled? I want an atlas of Mexico or map of Mexico with all of the main routes, roads, cities, and highways. Where can I find one and how much would it cost?
road trip/route planning: route 66? alright, just got the "here it is: route 66" state-by-state maps in order to start preparing for an extensive road trip down the mother road next may. the maps look accurate to me but still enormously complicated (especially when it comes to bypassing vs. driving through towns - i'd prefer the latter but doing so seems to complicate things significantly). do you have any experience using these maps? are there better (i.e. more efficient and less complicated) maps out there? or is the map working out fine once you actually are on the road? i guess one needs to use the maps in conjunction with a standard road atlas, right? any additional advise on planning the route will be highly appreciated. thanks!
Can you read a? Road atlas/map/A2Z
math help?!? 2.The scale 1:15 000 000 is a map scale. a) How many actual kilometers does 1 cm on the map represent? b) Would this scale be a road map or an atlas map? Explain your thinking.
HELP MATH question please best anwser 10 points?!?!? Given: You drive from Albuquerque, NM, to Rock Springs, WY, at an average speed of 55 miles per hour. Your route is along Interstate 25 to Cheyenne, WY, then Interstate 80 to Rock Springs. What would be your total driving time (to the nearest half hour)? Task A: Use an atlas or road map to solve the problem. Task B: Write a brief description of the problem-solving process including steps, calculations, and tools used. Use actual road distances in miles. Task C: Write a problem using the following elements. * Travel by air from Memphis, TN, to Las Vegas, NV, with stops in Oklahoma City, OK, and El Paso, TX, en route. * Students have a map of the United States that shows cities and a distance scale in kilometers. * Require use of straight-line distance in kilometers for each leg of the trip. * Average aircraft groundspeed is 380 km/hour from Memphis to Oklahoma City and 310 km/hour from Oklahoma City to Las Vegas. Task D: Write a brief description of the process you used to construct the problem. Task E: Write the steps you expect students to follow to solve the problem. Task F: Write a scoring key with directions for its use and application.
You drive from Albuquerque, NM, to Rock Springs, WY, at an average speed of 55 miles per hour. Your route is a? You drive from Albuquerque, NM, to Rock Springs, WY, at an average speed of 55 miles per hour. Your route is along Interstate 25 to Cheyenne, WY, then Interstate 80 to Rock Springs. A. Use an atlas or road map to calculate the number of miles you drive and the total driving time (to the nearest half hour) in Problem A above. 1. Write a brief description of the problem-solving process, including steps, calculations, and tools used. Use actual road distances in miles. Need alittle help with this. I no that it is about 800 miles total in distance.
No more maps to rattle -- and that gets ME rattled? More and more, it seems, state-based vacation or tourism sites offer all kinds of benefits online and will even mail you elaborate camping or hotel information in slick books, but -- So many have cut out the one thing I value most when visiting a new area: a state-issued road map. I have a good travel atlas but state maps are usually superior in showing scenic routes, state parks and forests, and other items of interest. Oh, yes, the road maps may be available online or as a .pdf. I know maps cost a lot of money, relatively speaking, but have the people at some of these state tourist commissions thought it through? How many people are going to download a state road map that consists of six or eight panels -- and then try to tape them together? OTOH do they expect the average American home to have a professional-quality color copier of 18 by 24 inches or larger? I think cutting out the free state road maps (HC) is a false economy. Cheers to Kansas and Missouri for keeping the hard copy maps available to the interested. Montana and Colorado, I'm sure you're very pretty but I think you've missed out in no longer offering free state road maps. How do you guys think about this? I don't want this to become a GPS advocacy site. SOOOoooo, are any of you out there similarly irritated?
Do you know where or how to get City Maps? I know that you can get city maps and guides for free but I'm not sure how. I'm taking a road trip and I have an Atlas but you like main maps for the Cities Memphis and others.
Where can I find free, printable, online state maps? I only need Indiana, Kentucky, and Illinois; however I need them to look just like a map out of an atlas (ie: all cities, counties, and major roads).
karen tumulty should be nominated for the best jounalism 2008? How to Pick a Veep Jun. 23, 2008 | By KAREN TUMULTY ...to picking vice-presidential nominees...of Vice President should tell...three-star running mates. The right... 1591 words | view cover So who might be pizazz choices for this year's contenders? McCain might turn to his longtime hero Colin Powell, the former Secretary of State and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. =========================================== One of the stranger ironies the Constitution has bestowed on American politics is this: some 50 million people just finished choosing the parties' two nominees in a grueling, yearlong primary campaign that cost millions of dollars and captivated the world. But when it comes to picking vice-presidential nominees, only two people on the planet get a vote: John McCain and Barack Obama. Between an explosion of democracy in the spring and an even bigger explosion of self-determination in the fall is a brief interlude of, well, something that Vladimir Putin could probably live with. Related Articles The Keys to McCain’s VP Pick When you are running for President, you can’t exactly just have a few friends over on the weekend, e... Wooing New Hampshire’s Undeclared The guy in the purple "I’m a health care voter" shirt stands up to ask a question at a John McCain t... Romney Frees McCain for New Fight When Mitt Romney stepped forward to announce his endorsement of former rival John McCain, the former... McCain: Frail with the Far Right John McCain emerged from Super Tuesday the undisputed heavyweight in the fight for the Republican pr... Everyone knows that the main qualification for the vice presidency is being ready, at a moment's notice, to step into the most powerful job in the world. But what qualifies you to do the job and what qualifies you to get the job may involve two completely different calculations. Both McCain and Obama have their selection committees already at work scouring candidates' financial and personal backgrounds, voting records and public statements. In a sudden setback that could slow the Democratic nominee's search, Obama lost his top Veep hunter, Jim Johnson, after the former Fannie Mae executive came under scrutiny for accepting preferential mortgages from a lender linked to the foreclosure crisis. Both camps will finish their work by early August, if not sooner. When they do, the choice of Vice President should tell us something — maybe a lot — about how McCain and Obama think and how they could run the government. There are a lot of ways to choose a Vice President, and each comes with risks. Here are five of the most reliable: 1. Play to Your Strength Perhaps the fastest way to send a message about who you are is to pick someone who appears to be ... just like you. In 1992, Bill Clinton picked another Southern baby boomer with a moderate record and a full head of hair. Then Clinton, Al Gore and their wives took a bus trip that looked like a rolling scene from The Big Chill. Picking Gore reinforced Clinton's claim to be part of a new generation of Democratic pols, liberated from the tired (and losing) politics of the past. If McCain were to take a similar approach, he might pick a No. 2 who has strong national-security credentials or another maverick who defies party labels — perhaps someone like independent Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman. By this standard, Obama might opt for a partner who is young and charismatic and also breaks a historic barrier of race or gender — perhaps Kansas governor Kathleen Sebelius — or one who transcends partisan politics, like Republican Senator Chuck Hagel of Nebraska. 2. Look at the Map An old-fashioned road atlas is a good Michelin guide for three-star running mates. The right choice can add balance to a nominee whose roots may seem a tad too effete to go over well in the heartland — or add some coastal glitz to a rural candidate's prairie-flat steadiness. As it happens, the last two candidates to make their picks with geography clearly in mind — John Kennedy in 1960 and Michael Dukakis in 1988 — were both from Massachusetts. And they both picked Texas Senators — Lyndon Johnson and Lloyd Bentsen — for the second spot on their ticket. More narrowly, the map can help a nominee make a play for a state that is crucial in November, though that is never a sure bet. Kennedy, with Johnson as his running mate, squeezed by Nixon to win Texas with a margin of merely 46,000 votes, in what turned out to be one of the closest elections in American history. But Dukakis got swamped in the Lone Star State, where Bentsen's considerable popularity was no match for the thrill of having another Texan, George H.W. Bush, in the Oval Office. This year, given the closeness of the race and the importance of winning a few battleground states, McCain and Obama will keep at least one eye on the Electoral College map right through November. That means Obama will be considering choices like Ohio governor Ted Strickland (though Strickland says he would turn down the offer) or one of three possibilities from Virginia — Governor Tim Kaine, former governor Mark Warner or Senator Jim Webb. Or perhaps a Westerner like Montana governor Brian Schweitzer. McCain might get an Electoral College boost by picking Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty, Pennsylvania's ex-governor Tom Ridge or former rival Mitt Romney, who has family roots in pivotal Michigan. 3. Shore Up Your Weak Side On the other hand, the nominee might need a partner who compensates for his vulnerabilities or perceived weaknesses. That was plainly what George W. Bush had in mind in 2000 when he picked Dick Cheney, a seasoned Washington insider with a long foreign policy résumé (who also happened to be heading up Bush's vice-presidential-selection process). And Gore knew that in picking Lieberman, who had been one of Bill Clinton's harshest Democratic critics during the Monica Lewinsky scandal, he was buying some distance from the incumbent Commander in Chief. In McCain's case, any doubts that voters have about electing a 72-year-old President might be allayed if he tapped someone far younger. And it wouldn't hurt, in a year when gasoline prices and financial jitters have moved past the Iraq war to the top of voter concerns, to look for a sidekick who is more comfortable than McCain is with economic policy. It may well turn out to be someone about whom the conservative base, which is a little leery of McCain, is more enthusiastic. Some possibilities the two might want to consider as hedges against their shortcomings: McCain could pick Romney or Pawlenty, both of whom have executive experience and relative youth, or perhaps an economic-policy expert like former Ohio Congressman Rob Portman, who served as both budget chief and trade representative for Bush. Obama, however, might want to address concerns about his youth and inexperience by picking a running mate who is older and has strong national-security credentials. He could turn to seasoned, silver-haired foreign policy experts like Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman Joe Biden or former Senate Armed Services chairman Sam Nunn. Pennsylvania governor Ed Rendell or former South Dakota Senator Tom Daschle would add some experience as well. 4. Hug Your Rival Even after a long, hard primary fight (and sometimes because of it), the ultimate winner almost always has to consider bringing the loser aboard the ticket. That's what Ronald Reagan did when he picked George H.W. Bush in 1980 and how John Kerry came to choose John Edwards in 2004. Sometimes party unity simply demands it. "We ended up with the obvious choice," says adviser Bob Shrum of Kerry's decision to tap Edwards. "People in the party overwhelmingly wanted him." Then again, a former adversary can have extra baggage. For one thing, there will be lingering tensions and suspicions that former rivals still harbor ambitions of their own. The other party is certain to dredge up every damaging sound bite — "Voodoo economics!" — that your former rival hurled in your direction back in February. These worries are usually overcome. Already it's hard to miss the steady thaw in McCain's once frosty relationship with Romney as the former Massachusetts governor throws himself — and his formidable fund-raising operation — into campaigning for the man who beat him. And Hillary Clinton's supporters — starting with her husband — are letting it be known that they expect Obama to give her serious consideration. 5. Hire Some Pizazz Some nominees find themselves in need of excitement. That explains why Walter Mondale tapped Geraldine Ferraro, the first woman on a national ticket, in 1984. "This is an exciting choice," he said at the time. Within weeks, Mondale did not see it that way. Given their difficult history of tangling over just about everything, hardly anyone would have expected Bob Dole to pick Jack Kemp as his running mate in 1996 — least of all Kemp. As little as three weeks before he was selected, recalls Dole's campaign manager, Scott Reed, Kemp was grumbling in GOP circles that he hadn't been given a speaking spot at the party's convention. So why did Dole pick him? "We were going for oxygen, heat and energy," Reed says. "We went through the traditional list, and we just weren't happy with what we were coming up with." Kemp later turned out to be far more complicated a partner than Dole or Reed had imagined. So who might be pizazz choices for this year's contenders? McCain might turn to his longtime hero Colin Powell, the former Secretary of State and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Excitement is hardly what Obama needs, but he could pick a woman, such as Sebelius or Arizona governor Janet Napolitano, who might force McCain to spend more time in his otherwise safe home state. But if you venture too far out of the box, voters will scratch their heads sooner or later — and eventually you might too. George H.W. Bush seems to have entered his Veep wish list into one of those dating computers back in 1988. That year he stunned nearly all his advisers when he tapped someone whose Midwestern roots were an antidote to his privileged Kennebunkport background, who was young to his old, who could balance his moderation with a dose of conservatism, and came up with Dan Quayle. The ticket beat the Democrats that fall, but by 1992 even Bush was trying to nudge him off the ticket. The ploy failed. Which is a reminder that however you choose a running mate, another rule will always apply: hard as it is to find a good one, it is sometimes harder to get rid of a bad one.
U.S. Atlas computer program? Im going on a road trip tomorrow morning and i forgot to buy a map, so i wanted to know if there is either a super hi res photo or a program for a U.S. Atlas i need pretty much all the east coast. Thanks in advance I thought of using google earth but downloading all the cache would take hours and im leaving at 3 am so i need some sleep. I will check for any other answers in the morning thought so please leave answers! Best answer will be rewarded
Do I need help?? OK..over the last 10 or 11 months I have been finding myself getting more and more "aroused" when I look at road maps, particularly this Rand McNally atlas I have of the USA. I can barely contain myself, I get so many "urges" while flipping through the book. There are certain states that excite me more than others, such as Kentucky. Do I need to see a shrink, or what??
Here are some things that you might consider to give/pas down to your kids? Here they are: 1. A lucky number. Long before Jordan sanctified it, number 23 was lucky just because Dad said it was. He'd look for it everywhere. Forty years later, his grandchildren fill the lane on the break wearing the number he decided was theirs. Memories accrete around specific things. 2. A passion for tax-free growth. 3. About $3,000. An inheritance cuts your kids' ambition in half, robs them of the satisfaction of making their own way, and keeps them from lessons worth learning. So you spend it. 4. A team to love. It's a durable pleasure, best passed from father to child. 5. A team to hate. Despising a team--with all the venom you can muster and for no discernible reason--is a gift that gives life shape. Death to the Astros! 6. A will. And prearrange a really, really, really inexpensive funeral, too. Rule: Money is best spent on people who are alive. 7. Love of country. The quiet, grateful kind. 8. A decent carving knife. 9. A dented wheelbarrow. Associate yourself with stupid donkey work, as in moving this stuff that's here, over there. 10. A fragment of inspiring verse. Memorized, so they'll always have it when they need it. 11. Stories of your screwups. In the interest of less pedestal, more human, be sure they've heard tell of your greatest misses. 12. A holy book. Your copy of the Bible or Torah, if either has sustained you. Your Huck Finn or Heart of Darkness, if you're of a literary cast. An atlas of the world around which a pilgrim is free to roam. 13. Enthusiasm for two movies: one stupid, one stirring. Say, Caddyshack and Braveheart. 14. A tattered road map. An old-fashioned, service-station map of a region you've traveled a lot with the family. It should have a few words scribbled on it, a couple of routes highlighted in yellow. Some of the crease lines should be torn from wear. 15. A baseless prejudice in favor of a particular make of car. Everybody knows that [fill in name of car manufacturer here] makes the best cars on the road. Period. End of story. 16. A family catchphrase. A brief yelp that captures your take on life and can invoke your spirit long after you're dead. More in the manner of "Onward!" than "Life's a bitch, then you die." 17. Respect for baby steps. Most work gets done an inch at a time. Teach them to just break ground. 18. A coat. Barn jacket, tweed topcoat, or camo hunting shell, there's something warm about the old man's coat. 19. A patented shot. You put the hoop up in the driveway, didn't you? Tell me you did, Dad. Name your unique fall-away jumper (The Dagger) or sky hook (Death from Above). Even memories require marketing. 20. U.S. savings bonds. They seem the very symbol of hope. 21. A handwritten description of a happy day. So what if you're not Tolstoy? Scribble a few contented lines about that 16th of October and stash it in your desk for postdeath discovery. 22. A pleasure in people. Some get annoyed that people are so odd; lucky folks know that's the fun part. 23. A maintenance jones. If they see you changing the oil in the driveway, they'll learn to get more service from their stuff and have deeper friendships.
What's big and has numbers? This is a quiz on local radio and for 28 days no-one has guessed it, a 7 year old child is shown an item and the above question is what the child came out with...so what is it?? The list below are all the current guesses that are wrong! i cant think of anything else lol Aeroplane Airport Check-in Lounge Airport Departure Board Argos big number screen Bandit Fruit Machine Bank Note Bathroom Scales Bible Big Ben Big Book of Sudoko Big Screen in Victoria Square Bingo Hall Bingo Machine Birthday Badge Birthday Cake Blackboard Bus Bus Station Bus Stop Calander Car Park Sign Cash Machine (hole in the wall) Cash Register Checkout Cheque Book Cinema Cinema Seating Clock Computer Cooker Dart Board Deal or No Deal Debit Card Desk Calculator Desk Diary Door Ernie The Premium Bond Selector Fishing Trawler Football Shirt For Sale Sign Fridge Gate Garage Forecourt sign Giant Calculator Golf Course Grandfather Clock Hair Dryer Helicopter Hopscotch House House number Hot Air Balloon Humber Bridge Toll lanes Hurricane Hymn Board Jukebox Kettle Keyboard K2 Lampost Lift London Eye London Stock Exchange Lottery Machine Map Metre Ruler Microwave Millenium Bridge Motorway Markings Motorway Sign Multi Story Car Park National Lottery New Year count down-er Numberplate Oven O2 Arena Paint by numbers Parking Sign Petrol Pump Petrol Station Sign Phonebook Photo Copier Pinball Machine Pool Table Postbox Race Race Horse Road Atlas Road Sign Roulette Wheel Rugby Shirt Ruler Safe Scales School Register Scoreboard Ship Snakes and Ladders Board Steam Train Speed Sign Stadium Scoreboard Supermarket Take away menu behind the counter Tape Measure Taxi Telegraph Pole Telephone Telephine Directory Television Thermometer Ticket Machine at a deli counter Times Table Poster Train Train Station Train Timetable TV Remote Controle Twenty Pound Note Vending Machine Viking FM Pink Camper Van Wagon Wheel Washing Machine Weather Map Weighing Scales Wheely Bin Wrist Watch Xbox 360
I need homework help!! PLEASE ASAP I HAVE TO EMAIL IT BY TONIGHT!!!? Revise the following paragraph, improving it without changing its overall meaning. As you revise, pay particular attention to combining sentences. Going on a road trip can be fun. A road trip can be a spontaneous adventure. Planning some aspects of the trip can make it more successful. Choose a good time to travel. Avoid traffic congestion. Make a list of sights to see. Make a list of their locations. This saves time thumbing through guidebooks. It is always a good idea to conduct regular maintenance on a vehicle before a long drive. Shops that do oil changes can check other fluids. Brakes should be inspected before traveling. Always consult the weather report before getting on the road. Tires need to be checked for proper inflation and wear. Lights need to be inspected. Be sure to take along a road hazard kit that contains blankets, a first aid kit, lights, and food. Plan nightly stops in advance. It is foolish to drive tired. A top priority needs to be finding a safe place to stop for the night. Finally, make sure there is a current and high quality map in the car at all times. A road atlas works well. Enjoy the trip!
Please help with this paragraph....? Revise the following paragraph, improving it without changing its overall meaning. As you revise, pay particular attention to combining sentences Going on a road trip can be fun. A road trip can be a spontaneous adventure. Planning some aspects of the trip can make it more successful. Choose a good time to travel. Avoid traffic congestion. Make a list of sights to see. Make a list of their locations. This saves time thumbing through guidebooks. It is always a good idea to conduct regular maintenance on a vehicle before a long drive. Shops that do oil changes can check other fluids. Brakes should be inspected before traveling. Always consult the weather report before getting on the road. Tires need to be checked for proper inflation and wear. Lights need to be inspected. Be sure to take along a road hazard kit that contains blankets, a first aid kit, lights, and food. Plan nightly stops in advance. It is foolish to drive tired. A top priority needs to be finding a safe place to stop for the night. Finally, make sure there is a current and high quality map in the car at all times. A road atlas works well. Enjoy the trip!
Free GPS Maps?!?!? I have a Magellan eXplorist 400 and it didn't come with anything more than a simple road atlas...well less detailed, anyways do you know any site/place i could look for any free download'able maps? Please help...thanks
For parents only: I'm driving in 2 weeks, and I don't know...? my streets very well--so, I was thinking that the best way would be for me to uses memory techniques to memorize directions to places and visulaize myself driving there in my head. Of course I would also use a map (on web o atlas whichever would be better) to help me. I'm a really quick study, and find the rate of absorbancy higher when things are written on paper. I've tried to pay attention to roads and stuff, but always got side-tracked in the car. So...what do you think? I trust your advice.
Poem Criticism and comments, please!? bury your Atlas crush my compass turn our treasure maps to ashes, and scatter them in a summer gust the road not taken shall stay untouched today, there are no new adventures no Gilgamesh, or gold to claim nor any honor to obtain in some dragon’s slaying. just you and I the friends we know familiar lips, and warm “Hellos!” the gruff old men and their mini-pins what we’ve walked before we’ll walk again. for you are novelty enough- so the road not taken shall stay untouched.
What is the best road map/atlas software on the market? I have been thinking of becoming a courier with my own truck and if I do I know GPS is the best thing to get but up until I can afford it, what is the best software you can buy for getting door to door directions. I need something that I don't have to be internet accessible to use. I just want to type some addresses into my laptop and be ready to go. Is there any software of this nature and if there is, what is the best? Thanks.
HELP MATH question please best anwser 10 points?!?!? Given: You drive from Albuquerque, NM, to Rock Springs, WY, at an average speed of 55 miles per hour. Your route is along Interstate 25 to Cheyenne, WY, then Interstate 80 to Rock Springs. What would be your total driving time (to the nearest half hour)? Task A: Use an atlas or road map to solve the problem. Task B: Write a brief description of the problem-solving process including steps, calculations, and tools used. Use actual road distances in miles. Task C: Write a problem using the following elements. * Travel by air from Memphis, TN, to Las Vegas, NV, with stops in Oklahoma City, OK, and El Paso, TX, en route. * Students have a map of the United States that shows cities and a distance scale in kilometers. * Require use of straight-line distance in kilometers for each leg of the trip. * Average aircraft groundspeed is 380 km/hour from Memphis to Oklahoma City and 310 km/hour from Oklahoma City to Las Vegas. Task D: Write a brief description of the process you used to construct the problem. Task E: Write the steps you expect students to follow to solve the problem. Task F: Write a scoring key with directions for its use and application.
HELP MATH question please best anwser 10 points?!?!? Given: You drive from Albuquerque, NM, to Rock Springs, WY, at an average speed of 55 miles per hour. Your route is along Interstate 25 to Cheyenne, WY, then Interstate 80 to Rock Springs. What would be your total driving time (to the nearest half hour)? Task A: Use an atlas or road map to solve the problem. Task B: Write a brief description of the problem-solving process including steps, calculations, and tools used. Use actual road distances in miles. Task C: Write a problem using the following elements. * Travel by air from Memphis, TN, to Las Vegas, NV, with stops in Oklahoma City, OK, and El Paso, TX, en route. * Students have a map of the United States that shows cities and a distance scale in kilometers. * Require use of straight-line distance in kilometers for each leg of the trip. * Average aircraft groundspeed is 380 km/hour from Memphis to Oklahoma City and 310 km/hour from Oklahoma City to Las Vegas. Task D: Write a brief description of the process you used to construct the problem. Task E: Write the steps you expect students to follow to solve the problem. Task F: Write a scoring key with directions for its use and application.
HELP MATH question please best anwser 10 points?!?!? Given: You drive from Albuquerque, NM, to Rock Springs, WY, at an average speed of 55 miles per hour. Your route is along Interstate 25 to Cheyenne, WY, then Interstate 80 to Rock Springs. What would be your total driving time (to the nearest half hour)? Task A: Use an atlas or road map to solve the problem. Task B: Write a brief description of the problem-solving process including steps, calculations, and tools used. Use actual road distances in miles. Task C: Write a problem using the following elements. * Travel by air from Memphis, TN, to Las Vegas, NV, with stops in Oklahoma City, OK, and El Paso, TX, en route. * Students have a map of the United States that shows cities and a distance scale in kilometers. * Require use of straight-line distance in kilometers for each leg of the trip. * Average aircraft groundspeed is 380 km/hour from Memphis to Oklahoma City and 310 km/hour from Oklahoma City to Las Vegas. Task D: Write a brief description of the process you used to construct the problem. Task E: Write the steps you expect students to follow to solve the problem. Task F: Write a scoring key with directions for its use and application.
I need a highway map (atlas) of Texas? I am trying to find an online road atlas of texas that i can look at and enlarge if i need to. I would appreciate any help. Thanks
where can i find a pocket europe (or world) atlas? - need road and street map of all the capital cities (also preferably major ones) in europe. - pocket sized for travelling a long time - preferably up to date as possible
i need a map to print up for the state of minnesota? road atlas for the state of moinnesota
Traffic and Logistics- Rail Road finding software or websites? Hi! I just started doing T&L and realized everything we have in the office is old maps and atlas'. I know I can go to sites like up.com, bnsf, csx, norfolk southern, canadian nation and canadian pacfic and see maps, but is there a software that'll find the information for you? Or is there a website that will aggregate all the maps into one? Or is there something that has railroad owners names? etc.etc.etc..just a helpful software or website would be a great start. Thanks in advance!
Was invading Iraq, really all about picking our battlefield? Now let's put away our "blood for oil" protest signs a moment and think about this. http://www.understandingwar.org/files/AfghanistanTopographicalMap_full.jpg Let's look at a map. Ours is a heavy mechanized and technical military. Afghanistan is a rugged mountainous terrain. Each foot soldier carries about 80 lbs. of gear on him. Tanks, Hummers, LAVs, etc. need at least some kind of road to traverse. The terrain of Afghanistan does not favor a mechanized infantry. The terrain of Afghanistan favors light mobile guerrilla fighters. With an endless network of caves, guerrillas can attack our flanks and disappear before we can turn to fight. With a peasant population, more interested in living than being free, it is hard to keep them on our side. But Iraq, there is a battlefield we can employ to our advantage. Smooth, wide open, good highway system, and close to allies from which to set up supply routes. http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/atlas_middle_east/iraq.jpg I know, Iraq never attacked us, but neither did Afghanistan. Islam attacked us. Islam has no one official country, no uniformed military, and no single Commander in Chief. Don't forget that Islam has been at war with the West for 1000 years. And keep in mind, when we invaded Iraq, the jihadis eagerly came there to fight us. Please write something more clever than the anti-Bush slogans. As for me, I'm a registered Independent. I like neither party. Also, I have no god in this fight, I am just an observer. Yes Politico, Muslims and Christians have been at each others throats for 1000 years. You can't PC a blood fued. OK, you can believe that. Then justify the USS Cole, two previous attempts to bomd WTC, numerous embassy bombings, Beruit bombing of Marine barracks, how many hijackings?, the tubes in London, the trains in Spain, etc. But you go ahead and just blame Bush for everything. The only resources Afghanistan has is opium.
Where can I find free, printable, online state maps? I only need Indiana, Kentucky, and Illinois; however I need them to look just like a map out of an atlas (ie: all cities, counties, and major roads).
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