58. A Line on the Map That Isn’t Actually Straight
On maps, many U.S. state borders look perfectly straight, especially those drawn along lines of latitude and longitude. It gives the impression of clean, precise divisions across the land. In reality, those lines are far less perfect than they appear.

Early surveyors worked with limited tools, and over hundreds of miles, even small miscalculations added up. What looks like a straight border on paper often zigzags slightly in real life, revealing subtle imperfections that have remained unchanged for centuries.
