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What world maps look like in different countries. What a world map looks like in different countries What a world map looks like in different countries

Means “entrance to the lakes” - in this place an extensive network of rivers and lakes flows into the ocean, creating ideal conditions for fishing.

Indeed, at the pier in Lakes Entrance there were many fishing trawlers, which immediately sold fresh fish and shrimp. Almost all vacationers in this place in Victoria could see a boat; many hotels have corners with tables for cutting fish.

Well, where there are fish, there are pelicans.

And the fishermen, accordingly...

In general, apart from fish and a couple of beaches, there is nothing special to see in Lakes Entrance, except for the private maritime museum Griffiths Sea Shell Museum, where you could find just tons of different types of shells, preserved and dried fish and other sea creatures.

Not far from Lakes Entrance are the Buchan Caves.

Well, after visiting the caves, it was nice to have a glass of local beer at the Bullant Brewery.

25 Aug 2012 12:12

We were already in Canberra in 2008, stopping for a couple of days on our way to Sydney. Then we saw that there are many places in the city that can be visited in a few days.

Before leaving Canberra we visited the Australian Parliament building. There were several police officers at the entrance who let visitors through a frame, like at airports. After walking through the halls and offices, visiting the green roof, we moved on...

15 Aug 2012 02:10

Consulting group the Economist Intelligence Unit has published its list of the world's best cities, with Melbourne topping it for the second year in a row.

The top ten cities look like this:

Great Ocean Road

20 Jul 2012 03:02

We took a trip to the Great Ocean Road last December and just added everything from that trip yesterday.

You can drive the entire road in one day if you leave early in the morning, don’t stop everywhere, and return directly along the highway. To take our time with sightseeing, we stayed for a couple of nights right in the center of the road, in the town of Port Campbell (Summer's Rest Units).

On the first day it was cloudy, so we had to wear jackets, but on the second day the sun came out and it became much more fun.

A few attractions we visited:

Despite s18(1) of the Spam Act 2003 (Cth), I agree and acknowledge that any message Vodafone sends me will not contain an unsubscribe facility. I understand that I can, at any time, opt out of receiving marketing material by contacting Vodafone Customer Care.

In general, Australian laws do not have to be followed, the main thing is to communicate this in small print.

23 Feb 2012 05:13

She received the surname Macpherson from her stepfather Neil Macpherson.

Thanks to her ideal body proportions (90-61-89), at the age of 18, Elle signed her first contract with the famous modeling agency Click Model Management.

In 1985, Elle decided to marry photographer and creative director of Elle magazine Gilles Bensimon, who was 20 years older than Macpherson. Thanks to her marriage, Elle appeared in every issue of Elle magazine for six years.


In 1986, Elle made the cover of Time magazine. By that time, she had already been on the covers of magazines such as Cosmopolitan, GQ, Harper's Bazaar, Vogue and Playboy. Elle also appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated six times during her career.


In 1989, MacPherson and Bensimon divorced, and along with her husband, Elle lost her largest employer, Elle magazine. This period in the girl’s career and life is difficult, but Elle pulls herself together and decides to move on.


Elle Macpherson in the movie "On the Edge"

In 1990, the first film starring the famous model, Alice, directed by Woody Allen, was released. Then she plays in several films: “Sirens” (with Hugh Grant), “Batman and Robin” (with George Clooney), “On the Edge” (with Anthony Hopkins) and others.

Also in 1990, Macpherson launched her lingerie line, Elle Macpherson Intimates, which is sold exclusively in Australia.


In 1995, together with her supermodel friends, Elle opened the Fashion Café restaurant chain, which did not become profitable and was closed in 1998.

In 1999, Elle Macpherson starred in five episodes of the popular TV series Friends.


In 2003, Elle was engaged to French financier Arpad Busson, with whom she had two sons, Flynn in 1998 and Cy in 2003.

In 2005, the couple broke up, and today Elle and her children live in London.

Smile!

22 Feb 2012 02:08

I read in the local newspaper today about what to do when traveling, and I saw this advice:

Smile. Always smile.

It"ll get you places you wouldn"t believe. From persuading Parisian waiters to speak English to figuring out where the hell you"re supposed to be sitting on that train, a little smile and a good attitude will get you help in no time. NB: There"s an exception to this rule – it "s called Russia. (They"ll think you"re mad.)

In translation:

Smile! Always smile.

This will open up so many new opportunities for you that you never dreamed of. For example, a waiter from Paris suddenly speaks English, or you finally find that fucking seat on the train - just smile a little and act accordingly.

One exception to this rule is Russia. They'll think you're crazy.

Each country sees maps differently.
Some believe that there is no need to print Antarctica, others want their power to be in the center)
Below are some photographs with comments from the author.

Remember in our schools in the geography classroom there was this map:

And this one too:

Probably many of you couldn’t even imagine that she could look something different,
but when I saw this, something broke in my perception of the world map.

It's very simple: this is how Americans see the world. As a friend who lives in New York told me, they have such cards in schools.
She herself first saw such a map at a language school. When she asked the teacher what was wrong with the card, he replied: what’s wrong with it?
They will probably also be very surprised when they see that on our maps Russia is not cut in half, and the United States is not in the center, as it should be.

map of Australia: there is no Antarctica here at all!

But here it is. Maybe they walk there on their heads, as Alice from Wonderland imagined? :)))

This is a map of South Africa. They don’t like Antarctica either, really, why do we need white spots on the map, especially when they are so vast, and they are larger than your country?))

This is a Chinese map. The principle is the same as on other maps: put your country in the middle of the world!

The French vision of the world map, frankly speaking, is not very different from the Soviet ones, apparently due to the geographical proximity of the countries, relative to Australia, South Africa and the same America.
But I found one interesting map, although it’s a hundred years old, showing how the French at that time saw the location of peoples on the planet.
Take a look at the territory of Russia, it turns out that at that time we had Russo-Siberians, on the territory of Kazakhstan - Turks (apparently Turkic-speaking peoples), on the islands of Sakhalin and Hokkaido - Ainu.
I wonder if they still live on Sakhalin?

There is also this map, on which the real geographical contours (which we are used to seeing) are distorted,
but it gives an idea of ​​the scale of the countries.

Remember in our schools in the geography classroom there was this map:

And this one too:

Probably many of you couldn’t even imagine that it could look any different, but when I saw this, something broke in my perception of the world map.

It's very simple: this is how Americans see the world. As a friend who lives in New York told me, they have such cards in schools. She herself first saw such a map at a language school. When she asked the teacher what was wrong with the card, he replied: what’s wrong with it? They will probably also be very surprised when they see that on our maps Russia is not cut in half, and the United States is not in the center, as it should be.

Map of Australia: there is no Antarctica here at all!

But here it is. Maybe they walk there on their heads, as Alice from Wonderland imagined? :)))

This is a map of South Africa. They don’t like Antarctica either, really, why do we need white spots on the map, especially when they are so vast, and they are larger than your country?))

This is a Chinese map. The principle is the same as on other maps: put your country in the middle of the world!

The French vision of the world map, frankly speaking, is not very different from the Soviet ones, apparently due to the geographical proximity of the countries, relative to Australia, South Africa and the same America.
But I found one interesting map, although it’s a hundred years old, showing how the French at that time saw the location of peoples on the planet.
Take a look at the territory of Russia, it turns out that at that time we had Russo-Siberians, on the territory of Kazakhstan - Turks (apparently Turkic-speaking peoples), on the islands of Sakhalin and Hokkaido - Ainu.
I wonder if they still live on Sakhalin?

There is also this map, which distorts the real geographical contours (which we are used to seeing), but gives an idea of ​​the scale of the countries.

28/03/2011

Remember, in our schools there was a world map in the geography classroom. Probably, many of you could not even imagine that she could look any different, but when I saw this, something broke in my perception.




IN It’s very simple: this is how Americans see the world. As a friend who lives in New York told me, they have such cards in schools. She herself first saw such a map at a language school. When she asked the teacher what was wrong with the card, he replied: what’s wrong with it?

They will probably also be very surprised when they see that on our maps Russia is not cut in half, and the United States is not in the center, as it should be.



Map of Australia: there is no Antarctica here at all!



But here it is. Maybe they walk on their heads, as Alice from Wonderland imagined?



This is a map of South Africa. They don’t like Antarctica either, really, why do we need white spots on the map, especially when they are so vast, and they are larger than your country?))



This is a Chinese map. The principle is the same as on other maps: put your country in the middle of the world!



I’ll supplement the post with one interesting statement from LiveJournal reader elle_812. When she saw these cards, she remembered one interesting conversation:
“When I didn’t live here yet, but was at a visiting MSPS seminar in Paris, we met with the former Secretary General of the Council of Europe Catherine Lalumiere. It was from her that I learned that in French textbooks the geographical map looks like this: in the center is France, and on the sides are all other countries.
“When I was in Russia for the first time I saw a world map with Russia in the center, and when I saw its size in relation to other countries, I was truly shocked, because we were accustomed from school that Russia is there, somewhere on the side, at the edge (à côté), with Siberia and snow..." - I’m showing you the words of Catherine Lalumiere from my old notebook."



The French vision of the world map, frankly speaking, is not very different from the Soviet ones, apparently due to the geographical proximity of the countries, relative to Australia, South Africa and the same America. But I found one interesting map, although it’s a hundred years old, showing how the French at that time saw the location of peoples on the planet. Take a look at the territory of Russia, it turns out that at that time we had Russo-Siberians, on the territory of Kazakhstan - Turks (apparently Turkic-speaking peoples), on the islands of Sakhalin and Hokkaido - Ainu. I wonder if they still live on Sakhalin?

However, many of us transfer the stereotypes learned through the map to our personal attitude towards the real world. We are beginning to believe that there are countries that play a dominant role in the world, located in its center, and there are those that play a subordinate role, located on its periphery.

As will be seen below, in different countries - Russia, Europe, the USA, China, Australia, Chile, South Africa - world maps are very different. It all depends on what the map author chooses in each of the following three conditions: 1) how to center the map relative to West and East; 2) how to center the map relative to North and South; 3) what projection method to use.

The vertical axis of the world (centering the West and the East) passes through Moscow. Both America and Australia find themselves on the periphery of the world. The Pacific Ocean is not perceived as a coherent space.

The vertical axis of the world passes through London. As with the Russian map, here both America and Australia find themselves on the periphery of the world, and the Pacific Ocean is not perceived as an integral space. Additionally, the equator (centering Server and South) is shifted to the bottom half of the map, making Africa, South America, and Australia appear smaller in relation to North America and Eurasia than they actually are.

The vertical axis of the world passes through the USA. America turns out to be an “island” washed by the Pacific Ocean from the west and the Atlantic Ocean from the east. As in the European map, the equator is shifted to the lower half of the map, which makes the size of North America and Eurasia much larger in relation to the sizes of South America, Africa and Australia than it actually is. In addition, for an American, the perception of Russia, India and China becomes more complicated: for an American, these countries are present twice? - in the west and in the east.

On its map, China is located on the western shore of the Pacific Ocean. All continents have access to this ocean, except Africa and Europe, which thus find themselves on the periphery of the world.

There is a general stereotype that what is above dominates, and what is below is in a subordinate position. Australians not only draw the vertical axis of the world through their continent, but also place it on top of all others, turning the map 180 degrees. Like the USA, they find themselves as an island lying between three oceans: the Pacific, Indian and Southern. Antarctica, hidden at the very bottom on all other maps, begins to play an important role.

South Africa, like Australia, appears at the top rather than at the bottom of the map, which makes it perceived as a country that dominates all others. South Africa turns out to be a peninsula wedged between two oceans: the Indian and Atlantic. The Pacific region and Russia are moving to the periphery of the world.

This world map was developed by order of the Military Geographical Institute with the aim of further implementation in school textbooks. Similar to the Australian map, this one is also upside down, giving Chile an immediate dominant position in the world. The Pacific Ocean is in the center of the map, and this is directly related to the stated policy of modern Chile, which wants to become one of the important business centers in the Pacific region. In this regard, Chile is somewhat similar to China. In the same way, Africa and Europe find themselves on the periphery of the world.

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