Shannon V. OKeets
Posts: 22095
Joined: 5/19/2005 From: Honolulu, Hawaii Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: marcuswatney Does Lerwick even need to be a port? The Shetland Bus set off from there, but precious little else. The problem is that the zone boundary as presently placed looks totally artificial. To avoid the accusation of a fudge, zone boundaries either need to steer clear of island groups entirely (as with the Faroes) or make them two-zone land-masses (like the Orkneys). Having Scapa Flow look two ways but Lerwick only westwards is, from the cartographic point of view, inconsistent. If Lerwick were deleted as a port, then the zone boundary could pass through the centre of the Shetlands, making much more sense. Secondly: why is there a political boundary between Northern Ireland and Britain? Northern Ireland is not a territory, but an integral part of the United Kingdom, just as Alaska is an integral part of the United States. The full title of the state is "The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland", and since the map has United Kingdom in big red letters, then Northern Ireland needs to be included. If for some reason you insist on treating Northern Ireland as a separate territory, then the mainland should be re-designated Great Britain, and, for consistency, Scotland and the Isle of Man should be created as separate territories too. Likewise, ownership of Shetlands and Orkney would be better described as UK rather than Gbr. I totally agree with your last sentence. I keep thinking it refers to Gibraltar. TaxMan66 explained the reason for the boundary for Northern ireland.
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Steve Perfection is an elusive goal.
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