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  2. Boreal Biogeographic Region - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boreal_Biogeographic_Region

    [1] Petersen et al. in their 1995 review of Nordic rivers distinguish two biogeographic regions in the Fennoscandian Shield. Their Southern mixed forest rivers group in southeast Finland has short, low-gradient streams in mixed coniferous forest, connecting many clear or humic lakes, ponds, peat bogs and wetlands, which overlap the boreo ...

  3. Boreal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boreal

    Boreal forest of Canada, a region covering much of Canada's land area; Boreal Forest Conservation Framework, a plan to protect the Canadian boreal forest; Borean languages, a hypothetical language family comprising languages of the Northern Hemisphere

  4. Geospatial PDF - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geospatial_PDF

    Geospatial PDF is a set of geospatial extensions to the Portable Document Format (PDF) 1.7 specification to include information that relates a region in the document page to a region in physical space — called georeferencing. [1] A geospatial PDF can contain geometry such as points, lines, and polygons.

  5. Subarctic climate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subarctic_climate

    [1] With 5–7 consecutive months when the average temperature is below freezing, all moisture in the soil and subsoil freezes solidly to depths of many feet. Summer warmth is insufficient to thaw more than a few surface feet, so permafrost prevails under most areas not near the southern boundary of this climate zone.

  6. Map - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Map

    The word "orient" is derived from Latin oriens, meaning east. In the Middle Ages many maps, including the T and O maps, were drawn with east at the top (meaning that the direction "up" on the map corresponds to East on the compass). The most common cartographic convention nowadays is that north is at the top of a map.

  7. Geostrophic current - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geostrophic_current

    The direction of geostrophic flow is parallel to the isobars, with the high pressure to the right of the flow in the Northern Hemisphere, and the high pressure to the left in the Southern Hemisphere. This concept is familiar from weather maps, whose isobars show the direction of geostrophic winds.

  8. Points of the compass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Points_of_the_compass

    32-point compass rose. The points of the compass are a set of horizontal, radially arrayed compass directions (or azimuths) used in navigation and cartography.A compass rose is primarily composed of four cardinal directions—north, east, south, and west—each separated by 90 degrees, and secondarily divided by four ordinal (intercardinal) directions—northeast, southeast, southwest, and ...

  9. Toroidal and poloidal coordinates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toroidal_and_poloidal...

    The terms toroidal and poloidal refer to directions relative to a torus of reference. They describe a three-dimensional coordinate system in which the poloidal direction follows a small circular ring around the surface, while the toroidal direction follows a large circular ring around the torus, encircling the central void.