UPDATE:
Well, so there you go. Nothing lasts for long, right? One of our students was admiring my globe and took on the challenge of dating it from memory. And of course, he notices that Israel is on it. AUGH! Israel wasn't so named until 1948.
So I do what I always do, which is to email the source: the company that made the globe. I sent them this about 10 days ago:
Hello there.
I got one of your 10" globes for my birthday from a friend. I spent some time figuring out how old it is and then came across your chart to be used to age globes.
My problem is that I had determined it was made sometime in late 1945 or early 1946 and then someone else had a spin around it and said it can't be that old because Israel is on it - named Israel, which didn't happen until 1948.
Ceylon, Baluchistan, Phillipine Islands, and Trans-Jordan are all on my globe, all of which had changed by 1948. Any idea why these 4 would be on there, but so would Israel be?
Also, my globe has Lithuanian SSR, Estonian SSR, and Latvian SSR on it, all three of which should have changed by 1940.
I"m super confused now.
If you're interested, I wrote a blog post about my adventure in aging my globe. I'd love to update it with some more information now that it's all been called into question.
http://karenadventures.blogspot.com/2010/01/globes.html
Thank you very much,
A happy globe owner in Boston, Karen
No response still! And here I thought it was so nice!
Today, I found this:
http://insidepublications.org/blogs/writinglife/2010/01/25/dating-a-globe/
This dude knows his stuff. Thanks, dude.
So now I'm the happy owner of a globe from 1949 instead of 1946. That's okay. It's still over 60!
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
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