Elevation: Florida Topographic Map

Florida Elevation Map

Elevation Map of Florida

This Florida topographic elevation map shows the Sunshine State in 24 terraced elevation bands. The scale runs from 0 meters (0 ft) up to 105 meters (344 ft). Each band steps through the relief in sequence, so the map reads like a physical relief model. Lowlands appear in deep greens, middle elevations warm into golds and reds, and the highest terrain fades into grays and whites.

Florida covers about 170,312 square kilometers (65,757 sq mi). Britton Hill is the lowest state high point in the country. Even so, the Lake Wales Ridge and the panhandle hills give this topographic map far more relief than most people expect from Florida.

Highest Point in Florida

Britton Hill, at 344 ft (105 m), is the highest point in Florida. On this topographic map, it anchors the pale summit end of the elevation scale.

Lowest Point in Florida

Florida’s lowest elevation is sea level along its coastline. On the relief map, this terrain fills the deep green base of the color scale.

Florida Map Datasets

I prepared this relief map with elevation data from the AWS Terrain Tiles dataset. The dataset builds on the NASA Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) along with other open topographic sources, and it serves global elevation data as map tiles that anyone can access.

The map spaces its 24 elevation bands with a blend of two methods. Half of the spacing follows equal elevation steps. The other half follows equal land area, a technique known as histogram equalization.

Why blend them?

A fixed interval scale would leave flatter regions sitting in a single color, which hides their topography. On the other hand, full histogram equalization would push a quarter of the land into summit tones. The blend lets this elevation map use the entire relief palette while the legend stays honest. Each label marks the true elevation behind its band, which is why the values are not evenly spaced.

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