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How
to Make a Topo Map
What you need:
- A lump of clay or Play-Doh® about
the size of a coffee mug.
- Piece of cardboard or large tile on which
to work the clay
- Piece of dental floss, about 2 feet (around
60 centimeters) long
- Ruler
- Piece of plain, white paper
- Long pencil
- 2 toothpicks
What to do:
Put the lump of clay on the cardboard and
shape a mountain about 4 inches high. Making the map is more fun if you
make your mountain a little lop-sided or oddly shaped. However, the mountain
should be flat on the bottom.
Use the long pencil to poke two holes straight down
through the center of the mountain. Make sure your two holes go all
the way through the mountain.
With the ruler, measure down about 1 inch
(2.5 centimeters) from the top of the mountain and make a little dent
mark with the pencil. Make two more dent marks lower down on the mountain
about 1 inch apart. Or, without using the ruler, just make three marks
to divide your mountain into four slices all about the same thickness.
Stretch the dental floss until it is taut, wrapping
the ends around your fingers so you have a good grip on it. Use the
dental floss to cut through the mountain at top-most mark you made.
Hold the floss as horizontal (level with the table or floor) as you
can.
Remove
this clay slice and place it on the paper. Use the pencil to carefully
trace around it. Push the pencil through one of the holes in the clay
and make a dot on the paper; do the same with the other hole. Put the
slice aside, but don't squash it. You'll need it again later.
Cut a second slice at your next mark
down from the top. Lay the second slice over the tracing of the first
one, being careful to place the holes in the second sick over the
dots on the paper. To line up the holes, poke the two toothpicks through
the holes in the slice and line them up with the two dots on the paper.
Carefully trace around the second slice. Your tracing will form a
circle outside the tracing of the first slice. (If you have "outcroppings"
on your mountain, the the second circle could cross into the area
of the first circle).
- Cut another slice at the next mark down.
Line up the holes with the dots and trace it as you did before. Finally,
place the bottom slice on the paper, line up the holes, and trace it.
Stack
the slices back up in order on the cardboard. Be sure the holes line
up.
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Admire your topo map!
Compare the topographic map you have
just made to the model mountain. Why are some of the traced lines
closer together than others? What kind of slope gives you lines that
are close together? What kind gives lines that are far apart? On your
topographic map, where are the steepest slopes? Looking at your map,
where would be the best place to build a trail to climb to the top
of the mountain?
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