Marco I think the way therion crops these is probably best. Usually one does not get much aesthetic benefit from a very large featureless outline above or shaded below, and a very large offset map could give you a very large output page.
If you avoid the preview altogether then the maps will be on top of each other (perhaps bad) but the page will be the right size (good). Or you could produce a separate map for each part of the cave like; map m1main -proj extended m1 m2 [20 0 m] below endmap map m2main -proj extended m1 [20 0 m] above m2 endmap This means your audience can see all the drawn detail on both maps, and can also see the relationship with the passages below. You can use map-image to paste one document within the other, or use a pdf editor to add both pages to the same document - sort of a manual atlas. Or you could use the atlas feature and select both maps; select m1 at map_above select m2 at map_above or even from my example above; select m1main at map_above select m2main at map_above I'm a bit rusty, but I think you should get an atlas with two chapters, one for each map - and you can hyperlink from one to the other. If you choose the right paper size settings they should turn out each on a single sheet if you want. As I recall there IS a bug (or at least unwritten piece of code) in the formulation for atlas whereas the origin coordinates for elevations cannot be set properly. (There is also a problem with plan atlas where a rotate statement other than 0 deg has been set). (I am waiting for baited breath for these to be fixed, as in my opinion for a project of any size, atlas outputs are much preferred to map outputs- at some stage the paper size exceeds the 5.5m pdf limit and maps will not work at a readable scale). I have not ever tried atlas with extended elevations - maybe they work OK, maybe not. Bruce