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Recognising topographic features

There’s a lot more to topographic maps than first meets the eye. Upon inspection, a user can determine the directions which creeks flow, the depth of a water course, how likely a gully is to contain water, and so on. These can all prove useful for navigating along a track, route finding, figuring out good places to camp, collecting water and so on.
Topographic maps convey natural 3D formations in a 2D format and show how other features match to these formations. Topographic maps depict four main types of features:
Landforms: hills, valleys, gullies, ridges…
Water courses: rivers, swamps, coastal…
Vegetation: national parks, farmland, plantations…
Constructed: buildings, roads, property boundaries, political boundaries…

Landforms
Understanding how landforms are depicted on topographic maps
Watercourses
Understanding how watercourses are depicted on maps
Vegetation
Understanding how vegetation is depicted on maps
Constructed
Understanding how manmade features are depicted on maps