1905J Notice as to Ordnance Survey Maps. 245 



our Australian Colonies and of some parts of India where 

 the wheat production may fall to 7 bushels to the acre, while 

 similar low estimates for Russian Siberia and for the Southern 

 States of the American Union leave their mark on the average 

 in each case. 



The Report concludes with comparisons of the cattle and 

 sheep in various countries in proportion to their population 

 and total area, and draws attention to the remarkable changes 

 which have taken place in the last thirty years in the 

 flocks of sheep maintained in the countries of Continental 

 Europe. 



The revision of the coloured map of England and Wales on 



the scale of four miles to one inch is now complete. In these 



maps the principal features of the country 



Notice as to are shown in colour, The maps are folded 

 Ordnance Survey , , .. f , . , 



Maps outwards, so as to admit 01 being read 



without opening the whole map, a method 

 specially adapted for motorists and cyclists. The size of each 

 sheet is 22^ in. by 15 in., and the price is is. 6d. on paper, 

 folded or flat ; 2s. mounted, folded or flat ; or 3s. cut into 

 sections and mounted to fold. 



Resembling the above in its general features is the map on 

 the scale of two inches to one mile. The area published in- 

 cludes the south, the south-midland, and eastern counties of 

 England and Wales, and the sheets recently issued include the 

 districts around Sheffield, Norwich, Barmouth, Leicester, King's 

 Lynn, Cardigan, St. David's, Llandovery, Pembroke, Swansea, 

 Lincoln, Stoke-upon-Trent, Nottingham, and Peterborough. 



The coloured map on the scale of one inch to the mile is 

 complete for the whole of England and Wales. The scale 

 on which this map is drawn makes it useful for general topo- 

 graphical purposes. It is especially serviceable to pedestrians, 

 since it shows the roads, indicating their character and whether 

 metalled or not, footpaths, hills, rivers, towns, villages, railway 

 stations, and local boundaries. 



