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  2. Wikipedia:Obtaining geographic coordinates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Obtaining...

    Has geographic coordinates for airports, heliports, and other facilities which have an IATA or ICAO code. You can also search by location name. Plexscape WS: Google Maps tool – Coordinate converter: Online application to acquire coordinates for any place on Earth. Supports more than 3,000 coordinate systems and 400 datums worldwide.

  3. Address geocoding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Address_geocoding

    Open Location Code or "Plus Codes," developed by Google and released into the public domain. Geohash, a public domain system based on the Morton Z-order curve. What3words, a proprietary system that encodes GCS coordinates as pseudorandom sets of words by dividing the coordinates into three numbers and looking up words in an indexed dictionary.

  4. Open Location Code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Location_Code

    Plus Codes logo. The Open Location Code (OLC) is a geocode based on a system of regular grids for identifying an area anywhere on the Earth. [1] It was developed at Google's Zürich engineering office, [2] and released late October 2014. [3] Location codes created by the OLC system are referred to as "plus codes".

  5. Geocode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geocode

    Geocode cells of Geohash, with 8 (blue) and 9 (yellow) digits, a typical hierarchical grid, comparing with latitude-longitude (12 or more digits). A museum is a typical location to be pointed by a geocode, its gate need ~20 meters of precision.

  6. Reverse geocoding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverse_geocoding

    Examples of these services include the GeoNames reverse geocoding web service which has tools to identify nearest street address, place names, Wikipedia articles, country, county subdivisions, neighbourhoods, and other location data from a coordinate. Google has also published a reverse geocoding API which can be adapted for online reverse ...

  7. Mapcode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MapCode

    The mapcode system was designed specifically as a free, brand-less, international standard for representing any location on the surface of the Earth by a short, easy to recognize and remember “code”, usually consisting of between 4 and 7 letters and digits.

  8. Man missing for decade spotted on Google Maps at bottom ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2015-11-13-man-missing-for...

    SEE ALSO: There's a hidden map on your iPhone that tracks everywhere you've been Seventy-two-year-old Michigan man, David Lee Niles, vanished on Oct. 11, 2006 after walking out of a local bar one ...

  9. Natural Area Code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_Area_Code

    Natural Area Code, also called Universal Address, is a geocode generated by the Natural Area Coding System - a public domain geocode system for identifying an area (also a location when the area is relatively small enough) anywhere on the Earth, or a volume of space anywhere around and inside the Earth.