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Blank Map of Alaska

Blank Map of Alaska

Download a printable blank map of Alaska for geography teaching, practice worksheets, classroom exercises, quizzes, travel planning, and more.

Preço normal $0.99 USD
Preço normal Preço promocional $0.99 USD
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Map Type

Add multiple maps to the cart to download them all at once.

Download your free blank map of Alaska or an Alaska outline map as a JPEG image and a PDF file!

Or get your Alaska blank maps bundle, including:

🗺 Blank map of Alaska with boroughs
🗺 Outline map of Alaska
🗺 Blank map of Alaska with borough seats
🗺 Blank Alaska map with cities and towns
🗺 Blank map of Alaska with Canada
🗺 Labeled Alaska reference map

The bundle includes PDF and JPEG versions of all maps.

The maps with boroughs and/or borough seats include the borough borders and city markers for:

Aleutians East Borough (Sand Point), Anchorage Municipality (Anchorage), Bristol Bay Borough (Naknek), Denali Borough (Healy), Fairbanks North Star Borough (Fairbanks), Haines Borough (Haines), Juneau City and Borough (Juneau), Kenai Peninsula Borough (Soldotna), Ketchikan Gateway Borough (Ketchikan), Kodiak Island Borough (Kodiak), Lake and Peninsula Borough (King Salmon), Matanuska-Susitna Borough (Palmer), North Slope Borough (Utqiaġvik), Northwest Arctic Borough (Kotzebue), Petersburg Borough (Petersburg), Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area (No Borough Seat), Sitka City and Borough (Sitka), Skagway Borough (Skagway), Southeast Fairbanks Census Area (No Borough Seat), Wrangell City and Borough (Wrangell), Yakutat City and Borough (Yakutat), Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area (no borough seat).

The blank map with cities and towns also has markers for:

Badger, Bethel, College, Kalifornsky, Meadow Lakes, Steele Creek, Sterling, Tanaina, Wasilla.

Ver informações completas

What Can I Do with a Blank Map?

A blank map is especially useful for learning geography, understanding regions and borders, and visualizing spatial relationships in a clear and simple way.

Maybe you're a teacher planning tomorrow's lesson. Maybe you're a parent pulling together a homeschool unit, a student studying for a geography test, or a traveler dreaming up your next trip. Whatever the reason, a blank map is one of those surprisingly useful tools that work in a hundred different ways.

Teachers can have students label countries, capitals, mountain ranges, rivers, and oceans. They can also show how borders shifted over centuries to make a history lesson click. Blank maps are also perfect for creating geography tests and printable worksheets, from simple labeling exercises to full quizzes tailored to your lesson. Hand out a map of Europe and ask students to draw the boundaries before and after World War I. Or use a world map to track current events by shading in countries as they come up in the news. Over a few weeks, students start to notice how much of the world they actually recognize.

Parents and homeschoolers can use blank maps the same way. Have your kids color-code the continents, label the five oceans, or mark the capitals of every country in South America. For older students, print a map with latitude and longitude lines and let them figure out which city sits at each set of coordinates. You can also pair a blank map with a labeled one and turn it into a self-grading quiz.

For younger students, coloring a map is one of the easiest ways to lock in geographic knowledge. Scavenger hunts and quiz games keep review sessions from getting stale. Set a timer and see how many states or countries everyone can label from memory. It gets competitive fast.

If you're learning a language, try writing a local greeting or a few vocabulary words on each country. It's a small thing, but tying words to a place on a map makes them stick better than flashcards alone.

Travelers can turn a blank map into a kind of visual journal. Color in the places you've been, trace your travel adventures an routes, and scribble a favorite memory next to each one. Print a second copy and use it as a bucket list. Mark the places you still want to see.

Blank maps are handy outside the classroom too. Drop one into a business presentation to show sales territories, office locations, or where you're planning to expand. Or print a large one, frame it, and hang it as wall art. Add pins for places you've been, stickers for places you want to go, or a few watercolor washes to make it your own.

All you really need is a pencil, some colored markers, and a little imagination. From there, a blank map can turn into just about anything.