OpenStreetMap merkið OpenStreetMap

Is that a country?

Sett inn af PlaneMad 3. júní 2016 á English.

Found this oddity through Chetan, that I never recalled seeing before.

At first thought someone squared a border, but this was created 4 years ago and is a disputed border area between Chile and Argentina.

Not been able to find many maps that show the border like this, but here is some interesting reading:

The Southern Patagonia Ice Fields from ISS. Source

Staðsetning: Natales, Huertos Endesa, Puerto Natales, Provincia de Última Esperanza, Magallanes and Chilean Antarctica Region, Chile
Email icon Bluesky Icon Facebook Icon LinkedIn Icon Mastodon Icon Telegram Icon X Icon

Umræða

Athugasemd eftir SomeoneElse sett inn 3. júní 2016 kl. 16:08

Most “international boundaries” discussions take place over at http://forum.openstreetmap.org/viewtopic.php?id=53173 - a trawl through the history there might find some prior discussion.

Currently in OSM it’s not a “country”, though it has been recently:

http://osm.mapki.com/history/relation.php?id=4112727

As ever with discussing actual changes, comments on the discussion on changesets that changed the state are the best way to try and understand what’s happening, such as happened with osm.org/changeset/37389042 .

Athugasemd eftir PlaneMad sett inn 9. júní 2016 kl. 14:02

Thanks SomeoneElse for the backstory. Always fascinating to read a disputed border story :)

Athugasemd eftir PlaneMad sett inn 9. júní 2016 kl. 14:21

Interestingly the Siachen Glacier In the Himalayas has a similar history of lying in an undemarcated zone that is claimed by India and Pakistan. The situation changed in 1998 after a war broke out between the two and the Indian army finally took control of the highest battlefield on earth.

Skrá inn til að bæta við athugasemd