Disclosure : This site contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.

Oxford, Chipping Norton & Bicester OS Landranger Map 164 (paper)

Oxford area, including sections of the Thames Path and the E2 European Long-distance Path, on a paper version of map No. 164 from the Ordnance Survey’™s Landranger series at 1:50,000, with contoured and GPS compatible topographic mapping plus tourist information.MOBILE DOWNLOADS: As well as the physical edition of the map, each Landranger title now includes a code for downloading after purchase its digital version onto your smartphone or tablet for viewing on the OS smartphone app.OS LANDRANGER SERIES: to see the list of all the titles in the OS Landranger series, both paper and waterproof versions, please click on the series link.Maps in the Landranger series provide plenty of recreational and tourist information, indicating the traditional public right of way paths (except in Scotland where different laws apply), including bridleways and byways restricted or open to motorized traffic. National Trails and selected other long-distance paths are marked, as well as on-road and traffic-free cycle routes with their National/Regional Cycle Network numbers. National Trust/National Trust for Scotland and Forestry Commission land is clearly marked, indicating open or restricted access. A range of symbols highlights camping and caravanning sites, youth hostels, tourist information offices and visitors’™ centres, parking and picnicking places, World Heritage sites, sport and recreational facilities, etc. The maps provide detailed presentation of topography with contours at 10m intervals, numerous spot heights and additional colouring and/or graphics for different types of woodlands, orchards or parkland, rock features including scree and cliffs, water features inland and along the sea shore with marshland, dunes, sand, mud, shingle and the high water mark. All the standard information expected of survey mapping at this scale is included: finely graded road network, railway lines with stations, cuttings, embankments, etc; individual isolated buildings; archaeological and historical sites, etc. For GPS users the British National Grid is shown at 1km intervals, with latitude and longitude given by margin ticks at 1` and cross hairs on the map at 5`. Each map covers an area of 40 x 40km, (approx. 25 x 25 miles).