5/ Another famous confusing place example is Tokyo, capital of Japan ๐ฏ๐ต, which includes some remote Pacific islands
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5/ Another famous confusing place example is Tokyo, capital of Japan ๐ฏ๐ต, which includes some remote Pacific islands 5 comments
8/ Another point of confusion is placenames that everyone knows and uses, but that have no official basis. For example, tell anyone in London ๐ฌ๐ง to meet you for dinner in Chinatown, and they know exactly where you mean. But it is not an "official" placename in any sense. But that's a topic for another thread 9/ All of this weirdness is the โsalt in the soupโ (as we say in German) that makes geo interesting, though at times it can also make it very difficult for a geocoder to give the answer people expect (rather than the technically correct answer). What's your favorite example? 10/ Thanks for reading (and sharing). Let us know your favorite examples of #geoweirdness. We have more threads about specific countries, border disputes, geocoding, etc on our blog. Some still on twitter, but week by week we are moving them to mastodon (and writing new threads) |
6/ A common mistake with places like this is to return the true geographic center point, which doesnโt match expectations at all.
OpenStreetMap solves this by setting tags like "admin_centre"
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Relation:boundary#Relation_members