Plan to head out on those
driving trips? Orienting the map will get
it pointing in the right direction so that the map features conform
to the features and directions of the real world.
Instructions
Step One Find the declination diagram in the
map’s margin. It looks like a little V and tells you the difference
between magnetic north (where a compass needle points) and map north
(the top of the map).
Step Two Note the number of degrees magnetic
north is to the left or right of the map’s north. (The diagram will
indicate if magnetic north is the same as map north.)
Step Three Twist the compass baseplate, the
rectangular plate on which the compass dial is mounted, until the
direction of travel line on the plate lines up with the zero mark on
the compass dial.
Step Four Line up one of the long sides of the
compass adjusted in step 3 with one of the map’s north-south
margins. Make sure the direction of travel arrow on the compass
points to north on the map.
Step Five Rotate map and compass until the
magnetic needle of the compass points to the number of degrees the
magnetic north is to the right or left of map north. For example, if
the declination diagram shows the magnetic north as 10 degrees to
the left of map north, the compass needle should point 10 degrees to
the left of the zero mark.
Step Six Congratulate yourself - the map is
now oriented. North on the map (the top) points to north in the real
world.
Tips & Warnings
Some maps have
declination diagrams with three arrows: magnetic north, map
north, and geographic north. Map north points toward the top of
the map, and geographic north points towards the top of the
earth. In this case, line up the compass with geographic north
in step 4 instead of the map’s vertical margins.
Local declination
(the difference between map north and magnetic north) is
different in every part of the world, so you must check the
declination every time you use a new map.