"Does that look like a circle to you? Its bottom edge looks squared to me, as does the top edge of the bunker above it. IMO that bunker and the bunker above are a single rectangular bunker. The illusion of single small bunker is created by the line delineating the green. In fact that line appears run right through that rectangular bunker."
Not really, and that's why I don't believe in the analytical efficacy of blowing something up like that map and that marking to some factor far greater (like 5x or 10x) than people were looking at who actually made those maps and their markings and those who actually used those maps back then.
I prefer to use the same size and scale of the orginals they used frankly and on my photograph of this particular "blue/red line" map that little round circle does look pretty exactly like what that bunker came to be. Ideally, I prefer to use the actual original itself and I'm aware you've never seen it because you have still never even been to Pine Valley where it is.
It's all a learning experience I guess and as I've always said to you on here I think you are a really fine expert on finding research material but I have never thought, and still don't think, that that talent transfers very well to your ability to actually analyze some research material.
I realize you think that I even mention this is intended to be some personal insult or cut towards you in the way you analyze some of these things. I assure you it has never been that and it isn't now----I truly believe that about you (or anyone else who ONLY does this analysis the way you do) and I always have and I've given the primary reasons for it over the years. Generally you do your analyses of research material on your computer and you just don't have enough experience with the original material and in that context I also very much include and mean the golf courses themselves, as you know. I don't think anyone would be capable of doing analysis any better than you do if they ONLY did it in one way, as you do.
I have always done it both ways----with the actual material including real familiarity with the details, and on the ground, of the subject golf courses and for that reason alone I really do understand the important differences in BOTH, and in the real differences between trying to do it only one way---via a computer, compared to the true value of actually being with the real thing in front of you and in studying the real thing in these ways.