The Complete Guide to Map Reading and Land Navigation
How to Find Your Way with a Map and Compass—No GPS Required
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Bob Mayer
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Your phone is dead. Your GPS shows a blank screen. The power's been out for two days—and you need to move.
Do you know how to get there?
Most people today can't navigate without a screen telling them where to turn. That's fine when the infrastructure is working. When it isn't, the ability to read a map and use a compass becomes a survival skill.
The Complete Guide to Map Reading and Land Navigation gives you that skill—drawn from the U.S. Army's Field Manual FM 3-25.26 and the author's Green Beret Preparation and Survival Guide, and rewritten from the ground up for civilian use.
What you'll learn:
- Why GPS will fail you — and why every prepared person needs a paper map as backup
- How to read any topographic map — colors, symbols, contour lines, and what the terrain actually looks like on the ground
- Grid coordinates — how to pinpoint your exact location using the UTM system, to within 10 meters
- Distance measurement — using map scales, pace counts, and field techniques to know exactly how far you need to go
- Direction and the compass — the three "norths," magnetic declination, and how to shoot and follow an azimuth without error
- Terrain reading — how to visualize hills, ridges, valleys, and draws from a flat map before you ever set foot on them
- Navigation methods — dead reckoning, terrain association, and when to use each
- Route planning — how Special Forces soldiers prepare before any movement, including checkpoints, handrails, and catching features
- Navigation in different terrain — forests, deserts, open ground, and low-visibility conditions
Three quick-reference appendices cover conversion tables, declination values by U.S. region, and a complete essential navigation kit checklist.
The skills in this guide require nothing more than a paper map, a magnetic compass, your eyes, and your brain. They worked in 1944. They'll work when the grid goes down tomorrow.
The U.S. Army didn't write FM 3-25.26 because they thought map reading was a quaint skill. They wrote it because soldiers who can't navigate when technology fails become liabilities. This guide makes sure you never will be.