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Maps are one thing the Internet does well. With a bit of digging, you should be able to find a map of anywhere in the globe. US denizens are well served with zoomable, address-sensitive map sites such as Mapquest (although these can be teeth-clenchingly slow). If you require ordnance survey-type detail - you'll still have to pay...


Sign, Heathrow airport 1996



Olympus Mons on Mars is the largest volcano in our solar system. All the moons of the Solar System are named after Greek and Roman mythology, except the moons of Uranus, which are named after Shakespearean characters.


Tai Chi, California 1998





from inference


Enter a keyword to find a travel site in our site database

No piece of paper can be folded more than 7 times.


Every continent has a city called "Rome"


The name of all the continents end with the same letter that they start with


If you gave each human on earth an equal portion of dry land, (including the uninhabitable areas) everyone would get roughly 100sqft






DeLorme Cyber Router. US-only route planner for auto journeys. Extreme ease of use and detail of route including highway exits and estimated duration. Links to AAAand/or "North Up" map of route in question.





MapQuest/ TripQuest. Slow, but bright and efficient interactive atlas. TripQuest is a brother company giving door-todoor or city-to-city driving directions/ maps (US only).
TripQuest
Map Search






Perry-Castaneda Library Map Collection. Extensive list of country maps with links to city maps. Good that it"s global, if a bit dull in its presentation.


Historical maps
Europe
US
Africa
Asia
World
City maps



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