Esteemed colleagues,
My library has recently moved a number of maps from our off-site storage
facility to our Central Library, and as a result we are interfiling our
historical topographical maps.  While interfiling, we came up with a
question we haven't been able to answer, and I'm hoping you can help.

We have come across several pairs of 7.5 minute USGS topographical maps
that appear to be duplicates.  They have the same original date, the same
revision/photorevision dates, and the same notations in the lower left
corner about source data etc.  All the information around the edges of the
maps looks identical, and the maps themselves also look identical, so far
as we can see.

But there is one difference.  One of the pair of maps has some dots just
below the map image, on the right side (near the statement "Interior -
Geological Survey - Reston Virginia").  The second map in the pair has no
dots -- or sometimes the second map has a different selection of dots.

The dots we've seen are black, green or purple.  Sometimes there is a black
star next to the dots.  I've attached a detail photograph of our 1969
Boyds, WA quadrangle sheet, which has a black star, a green dot, and a
black dot.

The purple dots seem to be present only on sheets that have been
photorevised, with photorevisions noted in purple.  But we haven't been
able to puzzle out what the other dots mean, and a careful perusal of our
copy of Morris M. Thompson's *Maps for America* did not reveal anything.

Can any of you help us out?  Or, can you tell us where we should look to
find the answer to this question?

thank you!

-- 
Emily-Jane Dawson | *reference librarian*
Multnomah County Library
  sun-thurs: Central Library <http://www.multcolib.org/agcy/cen.html> |
503.988.5728
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