On Wednesday 14 October 2015, Maarten Deen wrote: > > > > Academic detail. "Is" the boundary the river, or is the boundary a > > thing > > its own right, the geometry of which is described by the river? I > > think you can argue either way. > > And the legal part can be different too. It can be that the boundary > is the river and it will change when the river changes, it can also > be that the boundary has been defined as the river at a point in time > and if the river changes after that point, the boundary does not > change with it.
Note practically this is usually 'academic detail' as well - most demarcated boundaries are not represented by actual demarcation points in OSM but by some approximately drawn line. In case of boundaries at rivers this rarely gets worse when you attach the boundary to the accurately mapped river. Examples: http://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=15/32.0077/35.5299 http://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=14/0.7489/29.9702 -- Christoph Hormann http://www.imagico.de/ _______________________________________________ talk mailing list [email protected] https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk

