This is an archive of past discussions on Wikipedia:Graphics Lab, for the period 2024. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current main page.
Is it possible to make the United states striped in the colors for 5 and 9? Both lengths of ZIP codes are commonly used in the US. Some other countries on the map have different length postcodes as well but only for certain regions or special purposes while in the US one can basically choose which one to use. -- 188.23.202.105 (talk) 17:20, 6 July 2024 (UTC)
Discussion
The image description page says Maximum possible length of a complete postal code is shown. Seems to me it should remain marked as 9 only. Nyttend (talk) 11:46, 7 July 2024 (UTC)
Can you make a svg map of Distribution of Nepali speakers in India with this data atlas. Include only 5.01 - 20.00 and 20.01 and Above percentage. Thanks. (page 53; map 24) -- बडा काजी (talk) 08:00, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
1. Possibly helpful old reference map (1898) - his understanding of Natchez District is region 43 bottom left
2. Possibly helpful old reference map (1820)
3. Possibly helpful old reference map (1827)
ON EDIT - never mind unless someone wound find this fun - I found the original survey so I'm going to use that! - A Survey of the Route, proposed for the high way from Nashville in the State of Tenessee, to the Grind stone ford of the Bayou Pierre in the Mississippi Territory
ON EDIT - original survey, part 2, Tennessee River section.
Hello! I'm hoping to create a map of the colonial/territorial Natchez District of Mississippi to go with Andrew Jackson and the slave trade in the United States (and maybe Robards–Donelson–Jackson relationship controversy). The Natchez District was roughly where Warren, Claiborne, Jefferson, Adams, Franklin, Wilkinson, and Amite counties are today. The region was mapped intensely during the American Civil War but by then a lot of the colonial/territorial/Natchez Trace places were already shambling ruins so they don't appear or don't quite convey the historical geography. I'm also trying to convey a sense that in the 1788–1812 era this was very wide open, unsurveyed land that was still more Indigenous than colonized (leading to Andrew Jackson's later key role in Indian Removal), etc.
KEY HUMAN SETTLEMENTS
Natchez - GNIS 0691586
Old Greenville - GNIS 1782013
Bruinsburg - GNIS 691732
Washington - GNIS 679358
Port Gibson (south fork of Bayou Pierre) - GNIS 0676254
Grindstone Ford (north fork of Bayou Pierre) - 32.002778, -90.896111
Fort Adams - GNIS 670108
Petit Gulf (name changed from Petit Gulf to Rodney in 1828) - GNIS 676809
Grand Gulf - GNIS 670578
Walnut Hills (name changed from Walnut Hills to Vicksburg in 1825) - 0679216
KEY GEOGRAPHIC FEATURES
Mississippi River
Big Black River
Bayou Pierre
Coles Creek
Fairchild Creek
St. Catherines Creek
Homochitto River
31st parallel
Bayou Sara
The Mississippi River and other watercourses have very rudely moved many times since these places were settled (Rodney is now 3 miles inland etc), so it is messy overlaying these ghost towns on a current map but oh well.
{{resolved}} - While trying to find you more reference maps I found the original survey for the Trace which pretty much covers all of the above requested!
Request: Combined location map for Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger
I am requesting a location map for Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger combined with first level admin borders. This request is due to the three countries being most severely affected by the same insurgent groups which frequently operate in all three countries, along with the three countries integrating closer together in an alliance to act as a counter to ECOWAS -- TheMapLurker (talk) 05:11, 13 July 2024 (UTC)