Posted in Helpful hints, Hiking

Acquiring Ohio Topographic Maps

Topographic maps provide information on the geographic features and terrain contours of a given area. You can see where the lakes, streams, fields and forests are located. Brown lines depict changes in elevation and let you know where the ridges and hollows are located. As with a street map, roads, highways, towns, and villages, and political boundaries are also depicted.

The most interesting man in the world speaking out on topo maps


With a compass and a good topographic map, you can travel cross-country through areas without trails and reach your desired destination. I rarely travel cross-country these days, but knowing how to read a topographic map is a useful survival skill if you get lost. A good topographic map is also useful to hunters for finding game and to fisherman for locating just the right fishing spot.

Way back when, I used to purchase topographic maps by mail from the US Geological Survey. Today, you can obtain maps on-line or even on mobile devices. In Google Maps, select the Terrain Layer to view topographic maps. Similarly, you can view Google topographic maps via smartphones or tablets with the added benefit of locating your position on the map via the on-board GPS chip.

Google Maps viewed using the Terrain Layer

I sometimes take along a Magellan handheld GPS while hiking. The GPS manufacturer includes a base road map and offers topographic maps for sale. There is a site called Open Street Map that offers free open source maps. The site can be viewed from a browser. The topographic layer is called Cycle Map. A site in the Netherlands called Maps4me has ported the topographic maps from Open Street Map and made them available for download and installation on a Magellan GPS. I use these maps with my handheld GPS.

Topo Map viewed on Handheld GPS device.
Topo Map provided by Open Street Map

Finally, there’s a site called the Libre Map Project that has a free set of topographic maps covering the whole country. These maps are large and very detailed. Go to the site, select the state, then the county, and then select a sub-area of the county (by name) and download the map as a TIFF image file. You’ll probably need a tool to view the image file. For Windows users, I recommend the free image viewer IrfanView. For Linux users, Gthumb, Mirage, and GIMP will all work with TIFF files. You can also use these image viewers to print the map, or to convert the file to other formats such as GIF, JPEG, or PNG prior to transferring it to a mobile device.

Topo Map from LibreMaps




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© Deborah Platt, Robert Platt and TrekOhio.com 2012 to 2021


4 thoughts on “Acquiring Ohio Topographic Maps

  1. Is there a resource where on could get rendered lidar maps? And how would that be done? I would appreciate your attention to this question as it is pertinent to my research and I have few resources. Thank you, Craig

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