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77 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

What is the field manual for map reading and land navigation?

FM 3-25.26

What are the basic colors of a map, and what does each color represent?

Black- Indicates cultural (man-made) features such as building and roads, surveyed spot elevations, and all labels.




Red-Brown- The colors red and brown are combined to identify cultural features, all relief features, non-surveyed spot elevations, and elevation, such as contour lines on red-light readable maps




Blue- Identifies Hydrography or water features such as lakes, swamps, rivers, and drainage




Green- Identifies vegetation with military significance, such as woods, orchards, and vineyards.




Brown- Identifies all relief features and elevation, such as contours on older edition maps, and cultivated land on red-light readable maps




Red- classifies cultural features, such as populated areas, main roads, and boundaries, on older maps




Other- Occasionally other colors may be used to show special information. These are indicated in the marginal information as a rule.

what are military symbols?

Figures used to represent types of military Oganizations, installations, and activities

Where is the Legend of the map found?

Lower left margin

What are contour lines?

Imaginary lines on the ground connecting equal elevation, they represent high and low ground elevation.

what are three types of contour lines?

1. index


2. Intermediate


3. SUpplementary

How many mils are in one Degree?

17.7 Mils

How many Norths are there on a military map?

Three:


*True north


* Magnetic north


* Grid north

What shape are the contour lines that indicate a hill?

A hill is shown on a map by contour lines forming concentric circles. The inside of the smallest closed circle is the hilltop.

What shape are the contour lines that indicate a saddle?

A saddle is normally represented as an hourglass.

what shape are the contour lines that indicate a valley?

Contour lines forming a valley are either U-shaped or V-Shaped


What shape are the contour lines that indicate a ridge?

Contour lines forming a ridge tend to be U-shaped or V-shaped. The closed end of the contour line points away from the high ground

What shape are the contour lines that indicate a depression?

usually only depressions that are equal to or greater than the contour interval will be shown. On maps, depressions are represented by closed contour lines that have tick marks pointing towards low ground

what shape are the contour lines that indicate a draw?

The contour lines depicting a draw are u-shaped or v-shaped, pointing towards high ground.

what shape are the contour lines that indicate a spur?

Contour lines on a map depict a spur with the u or v pointing away from high ground.

What shape are the contour lines that indicate a cliff?

Cliff's are also shown by contour lines very close together and , in some instances, touching each other.

What shape are the contour lines that indicate a cut?

This contour line extends the length of the cut and has tick marks that extend from the cut line to the roadbed, if the map scale permits this level of detail

what shape are the contour lines that indicate a fill?

This contour line extends the length of the filled area and has tick marks that point toward lower ground. If the map scale permits, the length of the fill tick marks are drawn to scale and extend from the base line of the fill symbol.

what must be done to a map before it can be used?

it must be oriented.

what are 5 major terrain features found on a map?

1. Hill


2. Ridge


3. Valley


4. Saddle


5. Depression



What are the three minor terrain features found on a military map?

1. Draw


2. Spur


3. Cliff

What are the two supplementary terrain features found on a military map?

1. cut


2. Fill

What is a map?

A map is a graphic representation of a portion of the earth's surface drawn to scale, as seen from above.

what is an azimuth?

A horizontal angle, measured in a clockwise manner from a north base line, expressing direction.

What is vertical distance?

The distance between the highest and lowest points measured.

what is a contour interval?

The vertical distance between adjacent contour lines on a map.



What is the distance between grid lines on a combat map?

1 kilometer or 1000 meters

How many mils are there in a circle?

6400 mils in 360 degrees

Which north is used when using a military map?

Magnetic north when using a compass, and grid north when using a map.

How would you hold a lensantic compass?

Away from metal ( weapons, electrical devices); level and firm



Name two ways to hold a compass?

1. Compass- to- cheek method


2. Center- hold method

Are topographic symbols drawn to scale?

no

What do topographic symbols represent?

man-made and natural features

In military symbols, what colors are used for a map overlay and what do they represent?

Blue- Friendly forces


Red- Enemy forces


Black- Boundaries


Yellow- Contaminated area both friendly and enemy


Green- Engineer obstacles, both friendly and enemy

what is back Azimuth?

The opposite direction of an Azimuth.

How do you figure out a back Azimuth?

To obtain a back azimuth from a azimuth, add 180 degrees if the azimuth is 180 degrees or less; subtract 180 degrees if the azimuth is 180 degrees or more.

what is a declination diagram?

Shows the angular relationship between the magnetic north, grid north and true north.



what is the general rule for reading military grid coordinates?

right and up

How many sights does a compass have?

2

What is a benchmark?

A man-made marker showing points of elevation

what are parallels of latitude?

measured distances going north or south of the equator.

what is an aerial photograph?

an aerial photograph is any photograph taken from an airborne vehicle

what does UTM stand for?

Universal transverse mercator

The lensatic compass has a bezel ring; each bezel ring click is equal to how many degrees?

3

how many times would the Bezel ring click if it were fully rotated?

120

Large cities on a map are represented by what color?

Black

Name two ways to orient a map?

Use a compass and terrain association

What is the field manual for operational terms and graphics?

FM1-02

The arrow on a compass always points what direction?

Magnetic north

What does the term FLOT mean?

Forward line of troops

What are the alternate colors on a map and what do they mean?

Gray- alternate color for brown


Yellow- Built up areas


Pink- political boundaries

what is longitude?

Imaginary lines that run north to south originating in Greenwich, England and measured in degrees

what is a topographic map?

Portrays terrain and land forms in a measurable way as well as horizontal features of possitions represented

What is a small-scale map?

Those maps with scales of 1:1,000,000 and smaller are used for general planning and for strategic studies. The standard small-scale map is 1:1,000. This map covers a very large land area at the expense of detail

What is a medium-scale map?

Those maps with scales larger than 1:1,000,000 but smaller than 1:75,000 are used for operational planning. They contain a moderate amount of detail, but terrain analysis is best done with the large-scale maps described below. The standard medium-scale map is 1:250,000. Medium scale maps of 1: 100,000 are also frequently encountered.

what is a large-scale map?

Those maps with scales of 1: 75,000 and larger are used for tactical, administrative, and logistical planning. These are the maps that you as a soldier or junior leader are most likely to encounter. The standard large-scale map is 1: 50,000; however, many areas have been mapped at a scale of 1: 25,000.

What does the term intersection mean?

Finding the location of an unknown point by sighting tow or more known points

Why is a map so important?

When used correctly, a map can give you accurate distances, locations and heights, best routes key terrain features and cover and concealment information.

what does the term resection mean?

Resection is the method of location one's position on a map by determining the grid azimuth to at least two well-defined locations that can be pinpointed on a map.

If you find a symbol on a map that is unknown to you, where would you look?

The marginal data, located on the outside lower portion of the map

How many scales are there on a compass, what are they?

There are two;




1. Degrees


2. Mils

What are the 4 quadrants on a map?

1. Northeast


2. Southeast


3 Northwest


4. Southwest



What are the 3 elements for land navigation process known as dead reckoning?

1. Known starting point


2. Known distance


3. known azimuth

What is the feature that makes the lensatic compass work well at night?

The Dials and needles are luminous

What is a polar coordinate?

Plotting or locating an unknown point using an azimuth and a distance from a known starting point.

What is the name of the map system that the U.S. uses?

UTM

ON a lensatic compass there are two tings, and outer black ring and an inner red ring, what are the used for?

The inner red ring is used to find degrees, and the outer black ring is used to find mils

Name three field expedient methods of determining direction?

The shadow-tip method, the watch method, and the north star method



What is a contour level?

It is the vertical distance between contour lines. The amount of the contour level is located in the marginal information on the map.

The Border line around the edge of the map is called the what?

Neat line

Name the different slopes found on a map.

1. Gentle


2. Steep


3. Concave


4. Convex

You must find at least how many known locations on a map and the actual ground in order to plot your location accurately?

at least 2

What are the three main map sizes?

1. Small


2. Medium


3. Large



What are the two methods of measuring an azimuth?

Compass and protractor

How close will an eight-digit grid get you to your point?

10 meters

How close will a six- digit grid coordinate get you to your point?

100 meters

What would you use on a map to measure actual ground distance?

The bar scale