Map showing the route of a competitive pub crawl organised by the South West London Vietnam Ad-Hoc Committee to celebrate the 150th birthday of Karl Marx, 1968. Should you wish to retrace the steps of the participants, a larger version is
We Irish are rarely ones to shy away from a drinking session, but a 25-stop pub crawl seems a bit excessive.
Not a map, but "who likes looking at graphs?" might be a short thread.
Votes in the recent New Zealand election: those Kiwis that OTFers meet in London pubs are not representative of the population back home - more than twice as Green, for example:
And speaking of the DPRK, here's a forecast map of a bomb like that of their latest test exploding over Tokyo's Nagatacho (notes my correspondent, "and we'd still be stuck with that eyesore Kawasaki... sad!").
Lovely, SB. On a related note, previously I posted an 1851 map showing by (English-only) county the proportion of parish names that refer directly to water, here.
Anyone interested in maps and the history of Poland might want to take a look at this long-form article on the cartographical manifestations of the country when it, well, wasn't a country.
Flynnie's old stomping grounds are miles off the map to the left
Van Ness Avenue, the major break for the post Earthquake fire is about 1/3 of the way from the left edge, and the upper right corner shows how the grid had already been extended to cover lots of blocks that were still underwater.
Yeah, I wonder if that's true. Certainly the number in the UK is very striking.
On a rather different note, a map showing the distribution of the slave population in the southern states, compiled from the census of 1860. More info here. Big version here.
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