This map depicts the Wayne County (approx. 380km north west of New York City) area of New York State, starting around 28km east of Rochester, NY. To the north is Lake Ontario (one of the Great Lakes). Bounding the map to the south is the Erie Canal, Ganaragua and other creeks. Orchards and drumlins are prevalent. Some areas are swampy.

SUMMARY
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All primary, secondary, light duty and unimproved roads are shown. 

Orchards appear as regularly spaced small circles. They represent Rough 1 terrain, with occasional LOS blocks. 

Swamps are depicted with blue vegetation symbols and are a mix of Rough 2, 3, 4 or water.

Railroads have no effect in clear terrain, and are Rough 1 in non-clear terrain. They act as road bridges where they cross water.

Buildings shown in black act as Town. Those shown in brown merely block LOS.

There is a power plant on the lake shore, to the west.

A general aviation airport appears in the north center of the map with a single 1158 x 18 m asphalt runway.

A thin double line in the water at the north is an LOS block.

DETAILS
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This map and its companions depict much of the Wayne County (pop. 93,765), New York area based on topographic maps, aerial photos and direct observation.  Please send comments to dkasinskas@hotmail.com.


AIRPORT: Road
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BUILDINGS: Town (black) or Misc LOS Block (brown)
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Denser groupings of buildings are shown in black and act as Town. Included in maps 570-572 are towns and villages such as Clyde (pop. 2,269), Lyons (pop. 3,695), Macedon (pop. 1,496), some of Newark (pop. 9,682), Palmyra (pop. 3,490) and Sodus (pop. 1,735).

Many of the larger individual buildings represent hospitals, factories, stores and schools. 

Brown buildings are ficticious, but represent occasional residential buildings along roads and at intersections. These buildings block LOS but are not Town.


HILLS: E0/E1
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Most hills are drumlins. A drumlin is a smooth oval hill of ice age glacial drift, elongated in the direction of the movement of the ice that deposited it. Drumlins, which may be more than 150 ft (45 m) high and more than 1/2 mi (.8 km) long, are common in New York, Wisconsin, Canada, and Northern Ireland.

Terrain above 500m MSL is shown as E1.


ORCHARDS: Rough 1 and occasional Misc LOS Block
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Apple and peach trees are 2 to 3m in height, and are shown as groups of regularly spaced small circles. Orchards are depicted as they existed several decades ago. More recent housing development has eliminated some of them.


RIVERS, CREEKS, CANAL and LAKE: Water
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The canal has steep banks. A thin double line in the water at the north indicates an LOS block created to prevent offshore and shoreline units from seeing each other. This facilitates play and there is no such LOS block in real life.


ROADS: Road
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The least favorable road supports 30km/hr vehicle movement, so all are coded as road. The principal east/west road in the north is NY Route 104. 


SWAMPS: Mix of Rough 2/3/4 and water
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Swamps are shown as blue vegetation symbols. These are mostly Rough 2 terrain, with a possibility of Rough 3, Rough 4 or water. The more extensive a swamp, the more likely the terrain will be rougher or include water.