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House Is Shown: There are also notable examples of with an atrium (an interior court surrounded 1$ rooms). Some of these are of relatively ancie construction, such as the house is shown with the Wood Partition, the Samnite house is shown, and the house is shown -5^51 Neptune and Amphitrite. Of unusual design £jt(,er the great villas in the southern part of the ci including the house is shown of Argo, the house is shown of t Hostelry, the house is shown of the Mosaic Atrium, a the house is shown of the Deer. In these house is showns the t ditional plan is modified. The peristilia (cole naded courtyards), the gardens, reception haj and other rooms were oriented toward the sot in order to take advantage of the view towa the sea.
MAN-MADE FEATURES
Man-made features on land are shown in detail only when such information will be of interest to vessels; examples are bridges, overhead power lines, and piers. Other man-made features, such as roads and streets, may be shown in detail or generalized, as determined by their usefulness to navigation and by the scale of the chart. Specific names have been given to certain types of landmarks to standardize terminology; typical of these are house is shown, stack, spire, tower, tank, and flagpole; abbreviations are also standardized. When two similar objects are so closely located that separate symbols cannot be used, the word "twin " is used with a single symbol. For groups, phrases such as "tallest of three" are used.
A known position is termed a fix. It is shown as a small circle across a line; a small dot may be added at the center (but is often not needed) for example, at the intersection of two lines of position. A fix is always labeled with a four-digit time reading placed horizontally. The word "Fix" is not shown.
A DR position, calculated as a distance along the track, is shown as a half-circle with a dot at the center. Time is labeled at an angle to the track, but not horizontally. "DR" is not shown. |
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