Newark, New Jersey
Scranton, PA | Newburgh, NY | Danbury, CT |
Allentown, PA | Newark | New York City |
Philadelphia, PA | Atlantic City | 39,-73 |
Today's location: not yet announced |
Contents
Our Graticule
The Newark graticule is at 40 N, -74 W. This may be the most populous graticule in the United States, with a population in the neighborhood of 7 million people. It includes almost the entire northern half of New Jersey, the most densely populated state (Census), as well as Staten Island, western sections of Brooklyn and lower Manhattan in New York, and a part of Pennsylvania northeast of Philadelphia. In addition, other than Raritan Bay, there are no large sections of water.
Thanks to Meteorswarm, we have a Facebook group for the "North Jersey" graticule. Meet-ups can be coordinated here or there.
This page is maintained by I am the decider maintainer. Automatic updates are not desired.
Quotable quotes
- A rum keg tapped at both ends.
- -- Benjamin Franklin
- The Tollbooth State
- -- George Carlin
- Only the Strong Survive
- -- Popular New Jersey T-shirt
Suggested Meetup Locations
Interesting reachable locations will be posted the same day as they come up. The 80%-90% rate of private property discourages me from updating more often.
Geohashers can also receive daily emails with automated Google address lookup through activegeohasher.com.
Meetups will typically be on Saturday afternoon, at a time to be determined to maximize turnout. The location will be the most interesting and/or accessible of the week; typically open to discussion.
2011-03-18
Six Mile Run, Franklin Township, Somerset County
- Jevanyn:Ooh, ooh, it's reachable, and it's close, and ooh, ooh :-).
Retrohash
The geohash for the date in the original comic (May 26, 2005) is reachable, in Mill Brook, Morris County. If you make an attempt, tell us about it here!
Cities in this Graticule
New Jersey | New York | Pennsylvania |
Newark | Staten Island | Torresdale, Philadelphia* |
Jersey City | Lower Manhattan | New Hope |
New Brunswick | Parts of Brooklyn | Levittown |
Trenton | Langhorne |
* - The area, in the northern reaches of Philadelphia, is partially within Newark, NJ graticule.
Local Geohashers
- Madalis
- bjimba
- krip
- trntr
- TorsionalMetric
- Direwulf
- Jevanyn
- LangleyLGLF (When @Rutgers)
- Esteban
- Science Works!
- sve
- Zubenelgenubi
- Mike
- darko
- jimpoz
- RminusQ
- Brandon 20px and his father
- GISninja
- BlastOButter42, but probably only if it's near the city and New York's isn't closer
- AlexF
- Knitting Duck
- Flashbullzeye
- Kyukket
- dieKatze88
Attempted geohashes
- Main page: Category:Meetup in 40 -74
- Saturday, New Year's Day 2011: Jevanyn and Gwynnath made a quick stop on the way to a wedding.
Archived geohashing expeditions for 2008, 2009 and 2010.
Links
[Bing Maps] with Bird's Eye view, better idea of scale and finding paths through complicated terrain.
[Zillow] real estate valuation site, to find out if it's private property / a rough neighborhood / both.
[NJ Transit] for public transportation geohashes
And of course [Wikipedia] to find out which township/borough/county a geohash is in :-)
Wanted: a good bike-map website. NJ Bike Map.com is okay but doesn't include a lot of local bike trails.
- Google Maps now has a bike trail layer, which is a good start.
In the Media
On April 26, 2010, during the NJ 101.5 Casey & Rossi call-in show, a discussion about geocaching prompted a Rutgers student(?) to call in and mention geohashing. They of course mocked us as geeks, but we'll show them! :-)