What do you need to know?
To read a map you need to understand:
- what directions mean and how to use a compass.
- grid references.
- how to find what symbols mean by using a key.
- which type of map you are reading, for example, Ordnance Survey (O/S) maps, street maps, atlases and globes.
Watch: Reading maps
Grid references
This person is pointing to the park. It is located where two lines cross. If you follow the lines to the edge of the map you will see a number.
Tip:
First you find the number that goes across the bottom, which is 33 here.
Then you find the number going up the side, which is 11 here, so the grid reference is 3311.
You may see brackets around a grid reference and a comma to separate them, for example: (33,11).
Watch: Navigating the UK
The UK is made up of different countries, counties, towns, cities and villages. It also has lots of geographical features like mountains, rivers, forests and motorways. Maps can help us explore and find out more about landscapes.
Learn more about using maps in the UK in this 91热爆 Teach video.
Compass points
Sometimes the direction you need to take isn鈥檛 exactly north, east, south or west and it might be in the middle of two points:
- north-east (NE) is in-between north and east.
- south-east (SE) is in-between south and east.
- south-west (SW) is in-between south and west.
- north-west (NW) is in-between north and west.
Map-reading tips
Take a look at useful tips with compasses and maps:
1 of 6
Did you know?
Ordnance Survey or O/S maps cover the whole of the UK. After World War One, over 6,500 triangulation stations (like the one in the photograph), also known as trig points, were built across the country. Surveyors (people who observe the condition of land) placed their measuring instruments on them.
Today this method has been replaced by planes and digital photography, but many trig points can still be found around the UK.
Activity: Quiz 鈥 Map-reading
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