FOREWORD
  
  The Map Commission within the International Orienteering Federation is responsible
  for all matters related to orienteering maps, such as map standardisation, development,
  education and quality assurance. It is a body under the IOF Council. The ISSOM
  project started in 2001, as a result of the Leibniz Convention.
  The sprint discipline was in 2001 included in theWorld Orienteering Championships
  programme, and the Map Commission is responsible for establishing a map standard
  for sprint orienteering. The ISSOM project is a "fast track", low
  budget standardisation effort compared to the ordinary ISOM (the International
  Specification for Orienteering Maps) standardisation work. Our previous project
  was the ISOM2000 project, an update of ISOM, with special emphasis on the use
  of digital technology. The Commission spent about 3 years on the ISOM2000 project,
  being able to form a working group, a reference group, produce 7 offset testprints,
  etc.
  Sprint orienteering is something new.We have had park maps previously, but sprint
  events can take place in forests, in urban areas and even in mixed environments.
  To establish a mapping standard for this new discipline is much more complicated
  then for traditional orienteering in the forest. So, what we publish now is
  just a final draft.We are waiting for feedback, and we want to collect experiences
  at WOC2003.
  
  The structure of this document is based on ISOM2000. In some places we have
  followed the logical order of ISOM2000, so some of the numbers are not in ascending
  order. We have tried to distinguish between the semantics of a feature and its
  graphics implementation. For instance, minor watercourse (307) in the ISOM2000
  has been kept in the ISSOM, but the graphics implementation of 307.1 in the
  ISSOM is the same as the graphics implementation for 306 in the ISOM2000. The
  semantics are the same, but the graphics implementation is different (and in
  this case, the graphics implementation is the same as for a feature with different
  semantics in the ISOM2000).
  This file is a final draft, and we do not plan to make big changes in it in
  the next few months, but minor corrections may occur. The corrections will be
  listed on the MC website and the PDF file will be updated (check the date).
  You can download an OCAD template file which is based on this final draft. For
  additional information you can visit this website:
  http://www.swisshiking.ch/gloor/iof/
  
  Budapest, 28 February 2003
László Zentai (chairman), Thomas Gloor (project leader)
MC members: Sergio Grifoni, Jukka Liikari, Sören A. Nielsen, Erik E. Peckett,
Havard Tveite.