Forum:Territory application/AR120-47 - Iowana

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Please fill in the information below to make a territory request.
Noun Project Signature icon 619326 cc.svgTerritory ID and proposed name
The Territory ID (from OpenGeofiction:Territories, e.g. AR123a) and proposed name of the country

AR120-56 -- Iowana AR120-47 - Iowana

Noun Project Map icon 1463108.svgPhysical geography
An overview of climate, topography and landscape of the country. It is advised to also create a sketch, you can add a link to this (hosted on imgur or similar)

Iowana is a land of rolling hills. In the center of Iowana lays hills similar to the driftless reigon of Iowa. These hills do not have too large of an influence to Iowana's transportation network. West of the hills, Iowana has slightly drier land, perfect for cattle roaming, but go further west and land again becomes available for farming. East of the hills is very fertile farmland. Iowana's eastern border is made up of the Akogama river. The river is source to much of Iowana's history.

The summers of Iowana are warm, typically reaching highs in the 80s F and 90s F, but sometimes reaching in the low hundreds. Fall turns quickly from summer to winter, typically switching between summer like temps and winter like temps. Winter can reach lows in the -10s F. There is lake effect snow from the southwest, northeast, and southeast. Drifts can reach feet tall, and travel is typically very difficult during this time. Spring can bring heavy rains and snow can reach relatively far into the spring. Temps are very nice, and there are many fields of flowers in the province.

Invest - The Noun Project.svgHuman geography
A brief description of the territory demographics, economic development, land occupation, infrastructure and mapping style

Far Western Iowana

The far west of Iowana is covered in farmland. Due to the richness of the farmland here due to drained swamps and clearcut forests, there was not much room for larger towns in this area, and the land never grew up to have any large or significant towns. The transportation is not great for outsiders and travelers. many rural gravel and unimproved roads connect the rural fields and small townships. Further spread more important towns may be connected with a state highway, but in general everything in the north is under local control of the many townships. This has an unintended side effect of having very windy and unpredictable roads, further disincentivizing developments of towns. There are no major cross province highways in the far west.

Central Iowana

Just west of the hills is drier lands, caused by air currents influenced by the hills. This land is perfect for cattle grazing, and this area is very rural due to the lack of water and need for cities. The hills of Iowana make up Iowana's thinnest point. The hills are a tourist pull from many provinces around, and such there is a small city to maintain the tourism.

Eastern Iowana

Eastern Iowana is where most of the population is based, as well as the capitol, Fairphring. Fairphring is located located across from the confluence of the Akogama and the Neeseehoho rivers. Fairphring has a population of about 50 thousand people, but is not the largest city.

The largest city in Iowana is located on the farthest southeast point, Tragenston. Tragenston has a population of about 200 thousand people.

There are many smaller towns and cities running along Iowana's east coast, but they are typically less significant.

Counties

Iowana is interesting that it was split into thirds for counties.

Western Iowa is split into one mega-county, Diriant County, with the county capitol in 'Diriantsburg'., somewhat in the center of Diriant County.

Central Iowana is located in Brufst County, with the capitol in Brufston, located in the hills of Iowana.

Eastern Iowana was created earlier in Iowana's history. Eastern Iowana was split into many smaller counties.

Mapping styles

The mapping style of Iowana follows many of the midwest. Western Iowana is like southwestern Iowa, but more rural. Central Iowana is based off of the driftless region of Iowa, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Illinois. Eastern Iowana is closely related to Iowa, and laid out in a very similar way.

I plan on working with neighbor states/countries to improve connectivity with roads, rails, and other such things. If you are one or know one, it would be cool to coordinate!

Approximate Proposed Map of Iowana, Roads and Geography

https://imgur.com/a/PCLofHt 120-47 V2

Noun Project languages icon 105908 cc.svgHistory & culture
A brief description of the intended culture and language

Iowana has strong ties to the Ingerish and the German. The main language is Ingerish, but many of the smaller towns may have names derived from German or French.

The history of Iowana started with a rush in the 1800s. The government allowed people to claim a plot of land, so many immigrants to the FSA moved down to Iowana. The railroads came in just after this, and many towns in the north were started on the railroads, either by the railroad companies or by private individuals.There towns were often hastily made, so the older parts of these towns are often in a grid, and further developments adding individuality to the towns.

The western half of Iowana was given to the railroad companies by the Federal Government, in order to incentivize the railroads to build through. However, the plan never pulled through and the land was turned over the the Iowana government.

Many of the town's names were influenced by german and french names. This can cause Iowana to be slightly hard for non Iowanians to navigate around Iowana.

The East of Iowana is much more influenced by outside cultures compared to the north and south. This is due to easy access via the rivers, allowing for easy trade before the railroads and roads were all fully installed. Because of this difference, the politics of Iowana were such that the west wanted to manage themselves more, and because the east of the state did not like the west, in the 1800s and 1900s the government pushed most of the money to the east of the state, and the west generated somewhat independently of the east of the state.

Noun Project drawing icon 2123401.svgPast mapping
To support your request provide links to areas of OGF mapping which showcase your mapping skill. Mapping relevant to the requested theme & geography is especially useful
The {{coord}} template can optionally be used to link to the OGF map - it results in a nice formatted link. Or you can paste in a URL.


City and rural mapping

I have mapped the medium sized city of Spencer, located in Mecyna.

https://opengeofiction.net/#map=12/-25.3716/145.0726&layers=B

The borders I have mapped most are N of the railroad, S of Vinnie's Point, E of the ocean, and W of highway 10. This includes all of Spencer, Spencer River, and the Robert Spencer Highway.

Motorway mapping

https://opengeofiction.net/#map=11/-25.1863/145.9839&layers=B

EAST Expressway/Highway 3 from Exit 0 to Exit 7. Exits 8-12 were an existing primary highway upgraded to motorway.

https://opengeofiction.net/#map=11/-25.9945/146.1488&layers=B

SBHE, from South Bord to Herreingen. This highway span I mapped is long enough to cross about a quarter of Iowana.

OpenStreetMapping

While I understand that this typically has less relevance to OGF, I have OSM mapped extensively in a small portion of Central Iowa, on a few small towns and lots of landuse mapping.

https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=13/41.8119/-93.5542&layers=N

Noun Project Signature icon 619326 cc.svgUsername & date
Sign and date the application by typing four tildes like this: ~~~~


RobertTBS (talk) 01:27, 11 August 2023 (UTC)

Noun project 579150 Conversation.svgDiscussion
Discussion for clarification & decision


Hello RobertTBS, thanks for putting this application together. As one of the admins of Archanta, and as a long-time Federal States mapper (and potential neighbor), I had a few comments regarding your application that I'd like you to consider:

  • The climate of AR120-56 is slightly cooler than what you're proposing. The FSA is in OGF's Southern Hemisphere, so the further south you go the colder it gets; the state line between AR120-56 and Minnonigan (my state) to the north is set at 42°S; combined with the cooling effects of the lakes (the prevailing wind in our region comes from the northwest) would make AR120-56's climate more like central Michigan rather than central Iowa.
  • The Lakes are all already hydrologically planned and mapped; as such, Lake Betaouais does not have any natural outflow to Lake Sauganash, and instead flows south through AR120-57 (the state to the south) into Lake Minnehunkou. While a canal would be possible through the central part of the state, a natural connection does not fit with the existing regional mapping.
  • As a relatively new mapper, your edit history does not quite yet justify a "blank slate" state until you can demonstrate more macro-level mapping such as larger-scale river systems, larger natural areas, more detailed agricultural areas, etc.

All that said, I would suggest you consider AR120-47 instead. While the state does not have direct frontage on the Lakes, the eastern boundary of the state is on a major river that can still sustain some pre-railroad trade and settlement as you had planned, and as a few degrees of latitude further north it better fits your proposed climate and agricultural expectations. Additionally, the eastern half of the state has a lot of legacy mapping from previous mappers -- including a pretty comprehensive river network, a basic framework of key highways and railways, and a Midwest-style PLSS land survey already completed; this could serve as a suitable framework for you to get started with as you gain more experience mapping and as you get more accustomed to the Federal States and the existing regional plans. The western half of the state is still more of a blank slate to work with, so you'll still have plenty of freedom and liberty to create your own plan for that half of the state. Historically speaking, the land west of the "mountains" in this area (although the mountains are very low, think of the Driftless Area of the U.S. Midwest) would have been a later addition to your state as part of a "purchase" of land for a railway corridor; as such, as per your current request, you can still have some degree of internal conflict between different parts of the state. Finally, AR120-47 has five active neighbors surrounding the state, if you are interested in a more collaborative mapping experience.

If you are interested in applying for AR120-47 instead, feel free to create a sketch and modify this application as necessary. I hope you consider this option, as I believe it's beneficial for all involved. (Also, please don't hesitate to get a bit more creative with place names -- as someone knowledgeable of the State of Iowa, many of the names you've chosen are quite familiar.) -TheMayor (talk) 02:43, 11 August 2023 (UTC)


Thank you for the reccomendation. I don't think that I can edit the actual title of the page, but I have updated all of the other parts of the request that I can. It will be quite fun and interesting to build with other active mappers, and collaborate to build better roads, rails, and rivers. It'll be nice to have an already laid out PLSS survey, and it should help me to build more grid like cities. Thank you for helping me ti try to find a better beginner territory for my to edit!

--- In the future, I'm going to dig out some old cities:skylines map names, to try to have some more interesting names. Those are definitely more interesting than Polk, Elkhart, and Alleman.

- RobertTBS (talk) 04:02, 11 August 2023 (UTC)

Feather-core-check-square.svg Territory application approved
After discussion with my co-admin and the FSA coordinator team, given the application and your mapping history we have agreed to grant you probationary approval of AR120-47. Your probationary period will be active through 13 Nov 2023, and the state will be initially marked as "reserved". During the probationary period, you will only be permitted to map in Paonia, Bradlen, Nickel, and Wallawaukee Counties. Existing mapping in this area is to be maintained as-is, but you are welcome to add to what's currently mapped as you see fit within this area. After 13 Oct 2023 you can ask the FSA coordinators to review your progress, and if they agree that your mapping meets FSA expectations the full state will be granted. --TheMayor (talk) 20:00, 13 August 2023 (UTC) Also note that you will need to come up with an improved name for the state, if the probationary period is successful. The proposed one is basically identical to Iowa. Thanks/wangi (talk) 13:04, 16 August 2023 (UTC)
Keep in mind that the FSA is a large, collaborative mapping project; as such, staying active with consistent communication, collaboration, and coordination is integral to the project's success.