north of the logistically-important Tokmak in the Zaporizhia Oblast.
I just wanted to orientate myself, so I went to a tab upon which I have a mapping site already being visited, and zoomed out, scrolled across Europe and down towards the right bit of Ukraine. Only it looked odd.
...then, upon zooming in even further, I noted that the (open source) mapping data had been updated. Where the humungous and very obvious lake should be, there was a thin(ner) ribbon of river and vast amounts of "swampy/marshy" ground noted by the appropriate symbology. (Scrolling across, below the breached dam there was a lot more water than I recall, plus marshy areas. But not sure how 'normally' waterlogged that area was beforehand. It'd be interesting to dive into the source data and discover the diffs and old versions of the data, though, I'm sure. But everything technical I do with maps tends to be geared towards predownloaded 'current' versions, and I never thought to take and keep a snapshot when it was still the latest.)
I was a bit worried that (once I'd solved the above confusion) I wouldn't easily find Tokmak, because of translation/cyrillic issues (this view from this site defaults to local-language conventions, in its maptile imagery), but I should have known Tokmak is (pretty much) "Tokmak" even across alphabets. Though I was intrigued by the area marked just north of the main road, industrial buildings and an 'industry' area. As is usual, had to draw on my algabraic (i.e. Greek alphabet) knowledge, and a little interlingual assumption, to parse it as
probably "Tokmak Solar Energy". The working out of this pleased me far more than it deserves to have. (Though I suspect the current state of the panels is... more fragmentary. I might later go to a different map-site, with photo-tiling option, and perhaps see if I'm right and/or when the most recent public satellite imagery for the area dates from.)
But I see what was meant about the rail-line there making things particularly vulnerable. My mental image of the region has been updated. I just need to switch to some good topogical and/or photo tiling data to flesh out my terrain and land-use assumptions, but I try to ration myself on that sort of random scrolling, as I can easily be
hours casually tracing the route of a particular highway, waterway, abandoned railway or the edges of some national park/etc if I let myself.
(As it is, I already noted some random mid-marsh bits of land that were marked up special, which seemed to have
previously been notable islands in the now depleted megareservoir. I did do my 'algebra trick' on the text, but I can't remember at the moment what I then thought I was reading. Could have been local geonymic names that essentially is "big tree island", or else even "property of <cityname> sailing club", for all I know, knowing Ukrainean for neither "tree" nor "sailing", etc, never mind any more archaic name-rootings like "-wald" in germanic.
)
...if you'll forgive a little diversion into the way I tend to think of these things. But then it is the emotional thread, so hopefully it's still relevent to roam a bit, perhaps to entertain you with my off-beat map-appreciation 'skills', or lack of them!