![]() In the loop which will bring them back to Brioude they'll have to climb the Côte de Mauvagnat, a 2nd category climb of 2.7 kilometers at 6.7%. Before they get there they'll turn right for the start of the last 30 kilometers of the stage. This stage will be a little bit more hilly because after the feeding zone in Billom, the riders will climb the Col de Potey (3rd category, 3.3 km at 5%) followed by the Côte de la Forêt de la Comté (also 3rd category, 3.5 km at 3.8%) 10 kilometers further.įrom there, they'll go straight towards Brioude where they'll dispute an intermediate sprint but won't cross the finish line. In this first part, the riders will find an intermediate sprint in Joze, after 34 kilometers in the race. )ģ/ Wednesday 6 March 2013 - Châtel-Guyon > Brioude - 170.5 kmThe 3rd stage of Paris-Nice 2013 will cross, from the start in Châtel-Guyon, the Auvergne region from north to south but doesn't forget to bring a visit from west to east turning around Clermont-Ferrand, Pont-du-Château and Thiers before the peloton starts its descent towards Brioude. The last turn before the finish is thus much closer than what one could think when taking a look at the roadbook. Indeed, the race arrives at the finish from the Avenue Carnot / D607 and not from the Rue de Larchant / D16. ( Specific comment for those who would read the roadbook of the race provided by the organisor: the detailed map of the finish is not correct. Indeed, a first visit of Nemours will be with still 47 kilometers to go, but just before they cross the white line drawn in the Rue de Paris, the riders will turn right for one lap on a circuit around the city, which includes another intermediate sprint in La Madeleine-sur-Loing. Click on the different images to open them.ġ/ Monday 4 March 2013 - Saint-Germain-en-Laye > Nemours - 195 kmThe first stage will start close to Houilles, in Saint-Germain-en-Laye for a 195 kilometer long flat stage.Īfter a first short incursion westwards up to Beynes, the peloton turns south-east via Rambouillet, Etampes - where they'll find the feeding zone of this first stage and Malesherbes where they'll battle for the first intermediate sprint of Paris-Nice 2013.Ī bit under 5 kilometers further, the riders will arrive on top of the Côte de Buthiers, a 500 meter long 4th category climb at 4.2% culminating at 107 meters.įrom there, they'll still have 75 kilometers to go, not to get to the finish city but till the final finish and the crossing of the finish line. Hereunder you'll find the time- and route schedule, the stage profile and the map with the race route of this stage. To get there, they'll have to negociate about 10 turns in the quest for the first yellow jersey of this 71st edition of Paris-Nice. This article originally appeared on - 2.9 kmIt'll all start with an extremely short prologue, 2.9 kilometers in the streets of Houilles, just at the outskirts of Paris in the Yvelines department.Īfter a start on the Place du 14 juillet, the riders will follow the Avenue du Maréchal Foch, Rue Honoré de Balzac, Rue Gabriel Péri, Avenue du Maréchal Maunoury, Avenue Schoelcher, Avenue de la République, Rue Gabriel Péri, Rue de l'Eglise, Rue Camille Pelletan, Rue de Lorraine, Rue du Maréchal Galliéni and finally the Rue de la Marne which will bring them towards the white line which will be drawn on the road in the Rue du Président Kennedy. The site was created out of Carnegie Mellon’s Create Labs, in partnership with the World Economic Forum and other organizations. The maps also illustrate sociological patterns - like what countries refugees are fleeing to. The areas where this has happened are highlighted in pink and yellow. ![]() For example, this timelapse shows how a good chunk of Florida could be lost to rising sea levels if the average global temperature keeps rising at its current rate, according to scientists’ predictions.Īnother one shows the increase of coral bleaching, which is when coral reefs turn white due to warmer water temperatures and become susceptible to disease. The site’s interactive maps use images taken by NASA satellites from 1984 to 2016, overlaid with over 300 geospatial data sets from the World Bank, Berkeley Earth and WWF, among others. A new website, EarthTime, aims to shows how humans have dramatically changed the planet - such as how glaciers are melting and where refugees are migrating - through time-lapse satellite photos.
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