Welcome to the LnLP Forums and Resource Area

We have updated our forums to the latest version. If you had an account you should be able to log in and use it as before. If not please create an account and we look forward to having you as a member.

Map Maker Levels

Keydet

Member
Joined
Jun 7, 2015
Messages
759
Points
18
Age
72
Location
Suffolk, VA
Intriguing question. Don't know if question was ever asked and answered before and I 'm not the one to give the answer. Maps including the North Sea dikes and adjacent terrain (considered coastline?) would require capability. Work around could be to set the coastline at zero and the area of the sea at a height = to the altitude below sea level of the coastline. (and draw the dikes at the boundary). Might require a consensus of the community?
 
Last edited:

Tainster

Member
Joined
Mar 8, 2020
Messages
49
Points
6
Location
England
Because there is no standard "sea level" in MapMaker, the layer 0 altitude can be above or below the altitude layer where you draw a lake, river course or sea shore.
If I understand this correctly, you are saying that a lake can have a specified altitude, although I haven’t seen how this Is possible. I have tried starting the base altitude level at -1 but the software won’t allow it.
 
Joined
Oct 20, 2014
Messages
1,182
Points
63
Age
76
Location
Livonia, MI (Detroit-area suburb)
If I understand this correctly, you are saying that a lake can have a specified altitude, although I haven’t seen how this Is possible. I have tried starting the base altitude level at -1 but the software won’t allow it.
Layer 0 is always the lowest of the 16 available altitude layers. Rather than visualizing a layer as plus or minus a number of layers from a "sea level" (the base layer convention on a geographic map) view it as the lowest possible point on plane before water is added at whatever layer you want the body of water to cover.

If you want to show a region that is two layers below sea level, then you'd set your water level at layer 2 with layer 0 the lowest point on the map. To be accurate in terms of physics, you have to consider "what holds the water back?" when it's set at a layer other than 0, but it can be depicted.

It might help to visualize the "sea level" it terms of a high mountain lake rather than a seashore.
 
Top