OpenStreetMap

A friend got me a set of Soviet military maps dating to the 1970s and 1980s, which are uncopyrighted and unlike Soviet military maps of foreign countries contain original cartographic data and are not based on stolen copyrighted materials from foreign sources. I have thus begun examining them when the weather is bad for usable data. Two new route numbers emerged, the P-3 and P-10 national highways, which have been duly added to both the map and the Turkmenistan wiki article. The maps have also helped identify some villages on roads less traveled, where the names were preserved from the Soviet period into the current period (not many, but a few, and every little bit helps).

The map of Turkmenistan is actually useful. Today I needed to buy an elastic bandage, which involved a trip to a pharmacy. We have mapped enough pharmacies in Ashgabat that finding two pharmacies nearby was easy. The bandage was made in Dashoguz, and cost 16 manat (about $4.50 at the official exchange rate).

Location: Bagtyyarlyk District, Ashgabat City, Turkmenistan

Discussion

Comment from Ferdinand0101 on 25 March 2019 at 20:16

Are there any scans online?

Comment from apm-wa on 26 March 2019 at 01:56

Mapstor sells scans of the maps (see https://mapstor.com/map-sets/country-maps/turkmenistan.html). I bought them quite some years ago but found them unwieldy when viewed on a computer screen. The paper maps are much easier to review and study.

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