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The following 3 templates are often used together for 1 map. On June 5, 2011 they were replaced by BS-map for the sake of simplicity. However, these templates are already widely used even outside of English Wikipedia.
The Promenade des Berges de la Seine is a public park and promenade located along the left bank of the Seine river in the 7th arrondissement of Paris, between the Pont de l'Alma and the Musée d'Orsay. The promenade, created on the former highway that ran along the left bank, includes five floating gardens, planted atop barges, plus exhibition ...
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The route diagram templates encompass a main container, named {}. This system provides a uniform layout for route-map infoboxes, mainly for railway lines but also for other modes of transport such as waterways. The more efficient {} template has now replaced {} and its auxiliary templates, many of which started with "BS-".
Seine Grand Orly bus network, exploits a set colour palette since around 2020s for its public communication, which mainly includes line colors. Every line, whichever the means of transportation (bus, rail, boat, cable, etc), exploits a predefined set colour from this palette on all its communication (maps, timetables, led panels, etc).
The name Seine comes from Gaullish SÄ“quana, from the Celtic Gallo-Roman goddess of the river, as offerings for her were found at the source. Sometimes it is incorrectly associated with Latin sequor 'follow', but the Celtic word rather seems to derive from the same root as English sea , namely Proto-Indo-European *seik w - , signifying 'to flow ...
From downstream up the first two are considered seagoing vessels (in reference to their gross tonnage) at Duclair and Quillebeuf sur Seine and the remaining six (Dieppedalle, Val de la Haye, La Bouille, le Mesnil sous Jumièges, Jumièges and Yainville) being smaller are considered river crafts and comply to respective regulations and crew ...
It is a wide, rectangular inlet of the English Channel, approximately 100 kilometres (east-west) by 45 kilometres, bounded in the west by the Cotentin Peninsula, in the south by the Normandy coast and in the east by the estuary of the river Seine at Le Havre. The coast alternates between sandy beaches and rocky promontories and, in general, it ...