The diagram is located at the bottom center of the map.
Let’s zoom in to the diagram itself.
The
graphic and information presented relates directly to the declination
of the map area, orientation of magnetic north, orientation of grid
north and true north.
Let’s discuss what that all means.
The
line on the left with the star on top is the reference to true
north. True north is the principle geographic reference on all
maps. True north is oriented to the North Pole, the top of the
earth. The left and right borders of a topographic map are aligned to
true north too. True north is the principle compass orientation that
the backcountry traveler will use with compass navigation.
Care
should be taken when looking at the other grid lines on a map. For
example, not all township and range lines are oriented to true
north. The red lines on the map below
represent
township and range. The red numbers refer to each of the 36 sections
found in a township. (A section is a square that is one mile by one mile
on each side.) Determine if these red line are oriented to true north
in advance of your trip.
The
next line over is “grid.” Grid in this case refers to Universal
Transverse Mercator Grid (UTM). UTM is a derivative of the military’s
grid reference system and came about after World War Two.
Some
maps come with UTM grid lines laid out in a shade of light blue. Many
topographic maps only have UTM tick marks (color blue) along the four
sides of the map. The map above has those tick marks. Small they can
be seen as numbers 6 21 and 6 22 at the bottom. If one was to use a straight edge to connect the 6 21
at top and bottom the line drawn would be in relation to grid on the
declination diagram. (For more information on UTM Grid check out
Lawrence Letham’s book GPS Made Easy from library.)
The last line refers to magnetic north. This data is circled in red (below.)
The
line with the partial arrow head points to magnetic north
(MN.) Without getting bogged down in the pole’s location, the key
thing is to understand is that magnetic north is what a compass’ red
magnetic needle point to. The numerical value of 19° refers to the
declination; the angular measurement between true and magnetic
north. In this case, the declination is 19° East. It is this value
that the hiker will compensate for in navigation.
To
keep things simple, I use a declination adjusted compass so that I do
not have to calculate compass values. For example, if the hiker is
using a standard compass, 19° East declination (from the West Coast)
would be subtracted from a bearing/azimuth of 100° True to get the
correct magnetic heading. This gets a bit sticky and that is why an
adjustable compass is so valuable. With an adjustable compass, you
adjust the compass housing once for the local declination. Once
adjusted you are set and won’t need to worry about adding or subtracting
the declination value.
The
declination value on older maps has probably changed from what is
printed. Declination changes over time. As a matter of routine I
visit www.magnetic-declination.com to get the correct value before leaving home.
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