Map Skills Part3 Grid Reference
Map Skills Part3 Grid Reference
The numbers going across the map from left to right are called eastings, and go up in value
eastwards, and the numbers going up the map from bottom to top are called northings,
because they go up in a northward direction.
0. four-figure grid reference, such as ‘19 45’, indicates a 1 km by 1 km square on the map;
and
1. six-figure grid reference, such as ‘192 454’, indicates a 100 m by 100 m square on the map.
Sometimes you may also come across:
An easy way to remember this is that to get the first number, you go along the corridor
(horizontal, x axis, eastings) and then up the stairs (vertical, y axis, northings).
For example, the number 2 in the diagram below is square 19 across and square 45 up and
therefore, the four-figure grid reference is ‘1945’.
The numbered squares on the diagram above have the following four-figure grid references:
1 = 18 45
2 = 19 45
3 = 18 44
4 = 19 44
Six-figure map references
To get the six-figure grid reference, you have to imagine that the four-figure square is further
divided up into tenths.
In the example below, the grey box is in the four-figure grid reference square ‘18 44’, but more
accurately it is 7 tenths across and 8 tenths up within that larger grid square, therefore the
six-figure map reference is ‘187 448’.
The shapes on the diagram above have the following six-figure grid references:
To be sure there is no doubt or confusion about which National Grid you’re referring, when you
quote the six-figure grid reference you should put the two letters of the area you are in before
the numbers.
For example, you may be at grid reference ‘509 582’ in south-west Scotland. The complete grid
reference you should quote would be ‘NX 509 582’ (without the letters the numeric reference
would be repeated in every 100 km square).