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gewasreliëf

Gewasreliëf is a cartographic concept describing the portrayal of terrain relief through vegetation patterns on maps. The Dutch term combines gewas (vegetation or crops) with reliëf (relief). In practice, gewasreliëf refers to relief cues created by the arrangement and texture of fields, orchards, hedgerows and woodlands that align with the underlying topography.

Gewasreliëf can complement traditional relief representations such as contour lines or shaded relief by using vegetation

Historically, some topographic and agricultural maps employed gewasreliëf to convey landscape structure in rural areas where

Its advantages include providing a familiar, landscape-relevant cue for readers and highlighting land-use relationships with relief.

See also: relief shading, hill shading, texture shading, hypsometric tinting, land-cover mapping.

texture
to
suggest
slope
and
elevation
changes.
Techniques
include
integrating
land-cover
data
with
elevation
models,
and
rendering
patterns
that
resemble
furrows,
tree
belts,
or
grouped
crops
to
evoke
microtopography.
vegetation
strongly
reflects
terrain.
In
modern
maps,
the
approach
may
be
used
for
visual
storytelling
in
landscape
ecology,
agrarian
planning,
or
historical
map
reproduction
when
vegetation
history
is
important.
Limitations
include
sensitivity
to
seasonal
changes,
crop
rotation,
and
dense
forest,
where
vegetation
patterns
obscure
or
exaggerate
true
elevation
features,
and
the
need
for
current
land-cover
data.