Difference between revisions of "Ahmednagar, India"
From Geohashing
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| lon= 74 | | lon= 74 | ||
| nw = [[Ojhar, India|Ojhar]] | | nw = [[Ojhar, India|Ojhar]] | ||
− | | n = [[ | + | | n = [[Mālegaon, India|Mālegaon]] |
− | | ne = [[ | + | | ne = [[Chālisgaon, India|Chālisgaon]] |
− | | w = [[ | + | | w = [[Nāsik, India|Nāsik]] |
| name = [[Ahmednagar, India|Ahmednagar]] | | name = [[Ahmednagar, India|Ahmednagar]] | ||
− | | e = [[ | + | | e = [[Aurangābād, India|Aurangābād]] |
| sw = [[Pune, India|Pune]] | | sw = [[Pune, India|Pune]] | ||
− | | s = [[ | + | | s = [[Bārāmati, India|Bārāmati]] |
− | | se = [[ | + | | se = [[Bārsi, India|Bārsi]] |
}} | }} | ||
− | The {{PAGENAME}} [[graticule]] is located around | + | The {{PAGENAME}} [[graticule]] is located around {{Today's location|lat=19|lon=74|text=latitude 19, longitude 74}}. It's land use is almost entirely agricultural, with small fields and access roads which make access to most hash points quite feasible, if you aren't afraid of leopards or malaria. It is notable for containing most of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_Metrewave_Radio_Telescope Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope] array. Though this facility has lots of resources (including hand-held GPS devices and cars that can easily handle the rural terrain), they're usually reserved for projects which actually use the telescope, and not so much spontaneous adventuring like geohashing. Too bad. |
==Geohashes== | ==Geohashes== |
Latest revision as of 16:31, 15 January 2022
Ojhar | Mālegaon | Chālisgaon |
Nāsik | Ahmednagar | Aurangābād |
Pune | Bārāmati | Bārsi |
Today's location: geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox |
The Ahmednagar, India graticule is located around latitude 19, longitude 74. It's land use is almost entirely agricultural, with small fields and access roads which make access to most hash points quite feasible, if you aren't afraid of leopards or malaria. It is notable for containing most of the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope array. Though this facility has lots of resources (including hand-held GPS devices and cars that can easily handle the rural terrain), they're usually reserved for projects which actually use the telescope, and not so much spontaneous adventuring like geohashing. Too bad.
Geohashes
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