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'In the Marshall Islands,' writes Ben Finney, 'and only there, navigators skilled at reading the way islands disrupt the patterning of the deep ocean swells made "stick charts" depicting islands and their effect on the swells.'
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5. Siberian sealskin map (c. 1860). Drawn on sealskin by a member of the semi-nomadic Chukchi people, who live on the Asiatic side of Siberia's Bering Strait, it depicts the coastal topography of Chukotka Peninsula and its trade locations
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7. Lukala wall map (DR Congo) The map shows the location of the guardian spirits, chiefdoms, and waterways important to Luba kingship and history. Map photographed in 1898 on the Charles Lemaire expedition to the Lovoi River (History of Cartography III, p. 32)
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11. Maps drawn in the sand by Tuareg herders from the Sahel region, put on paper by Tuareg informants and modified for publication by French geographer Edmond Bemus (from Edmond Bemus, 'La représentation de l'espace chez des Touaregs du Sahel', in 'Mappemonde' 1988/3)
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