Maps used to be like puzzle pieces that showed the world, just like how you fit together a picture puzzle to see what it looks like.
Imagine you have a big box of puzzle pieces, and each one shows part of a bigger picture. Some pieces show trees, some show water, and when you put them all together, you get a whole scene. That’s kind of what old maps were like, they were pieces that showed parts of the world, and people used them to figure out where everything was.
How it worked
Back then, people didn’t have computers or smartphones to show them the world. They had maps, which looked more like puzzles than today’s smooth drawings. Each map might only show one part of the earth, like a piece of a big jigsaw puzzle. People would put these maps together in their heads or on paper to imagine how everything connected.
It was like having just a few pieces from your favorite picture and trying to guess what the whole picture looks like, fun, but not always complete! Maps used to be like puzzle pieces that showed the world, just like how you fit together a picture puzzle to see what it looks like.
Imagine you have a big box of puzzle pieces, and each one shows part of a bigger picture. Some pieces show trees, some show water, and when you put them all together, you get a whole scene. That’s kind of what old maps were like, they were pieces that showed parts of the world, and people used them to figure out where everything was.
Examples
- A child pieces together a map of Europe like a jigsaw puzzle.
- An ancient sailor uses a map with symbols to navigate the sea.
- A teacher shows students how early maps looked like puzzles.
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See also
- How Did the First Maps Influence Explorers?
- What is Long ago, people didn’t have GPS or paper?
- How Does A Brief History of Cartography and Maps Work?
- Did ancient peoples ever hide their treasure behind puzzles?
- How Did the Ancient Romans Manage Their Empire Without Modern Tech?