All spaces considered In this note are metric, and all maps are continuous functions. A compactum is a compact metric space. A continuum is a connected compactum. In [1], Ford and Rogers defined a mapr: X-*Y from a compactum X onto a compactum Y to be refinableif for each £>0, there is an s-map/: X-+Y from X onto Y whose distance from r is less than s. Refinable maps are useful in continuum theory, and many properties in continuum theory are preserved by refinable maps. For example, decomposability [1], aposyndesis [2], property [k], irreducibility,hereditary indecomposability and being the pseudo-arc [6] (see for other properties [4] and [5]). Lelek [8] defined the surjective span of a continuum X, a*(X), (resp. the surjective semi-span, o*(X)) to be the least upper bound of all real numbers a with the following property; there exist a continuum C and maps ft,ft: C-*X such that /1(C)=X=/8(C)(resp. /a(C)=J^) and dist(/i(c),/2(c))^a for every cg C. The span a(X) and the semi-span <?0{X) of X are defined by the formulas;