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Oaks and Naval Expansion
12026-02-19T15:44:39-05:00Anastasiia Pereverten1dee3aa5075817eb04077dbae88a1030d7d4ebb491At the turn of the 18th century, Peter I declared that his land-based empire would become a naval power. This map gives us a sense of the difficulty of that task. It shows us where the Baltic Fleet had to go (in 1806) to acquire the oak trees necessary for building ship hulls. The number of mature trees ready to be felled at each location is represented by a small dot surrounded by a larger dot representing the total number of trees present. Meanwhile, the color gradient tells us how far each oak grove was from the fleet's shipyards (the darker the color, the greater the distance). Now, imagine yourself the admiral tasked with producing ships-of-the-line just as the Napoleonic Wars were getting underway. What would you do? How would you transport precious oaks as much as 700 miles to the Baltic coast? Use our map to study the Russian Empire’s drive for naval power as an environmental and logistical project. Add layers, take measurements, and compare the Baltic and Black Sea fleet geographies.plain2026-02-19T15:44:39-05:00Anastasiia Pereverten1dee3aa5075817eb04077dbae88a1030d7d4ebb4
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12026-02-19T12:59:49-05:00Paul Vadanf46fd2a7a6d2ab1ecca0ec13c84118eaf61facfaMap of the Week GalleryAnastasiia Pereverten39structured_gallery2026-02-27T13:24:14-05:00Anastasiia Pereverten1dee3aa5075817eb04077dbae88a1030d7d4ebb4