Glossary of BLM Surveying and Mapping Terms

Glossary of BLM Surveying and Mapping Terms

Author: U. S. Department Of The Interior

Publisher:

Published: 2013-06-04

Total Pages: 134

ISBN-13: 9781304103932

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The original edition of this glossary was developed for use by trainee cadastral surveyors during the cadastral survey professional series of training courses. This edition is intended for use by all BLM personnel and should be of particular value to newly hired cadastral and cartographic personnel. For the sake of clarity and exactness, many first edition definitions have been modified. The definitions are not meant to conflict with those in other glossaries, but since the glossary is for BLM cadastral personnel, some terms will have a meaning unique to BLM cadastral surveys.


GIS and Land Records

GIS and Land Records

Author: Nancy Von Meyer

Publisher: ESRI, Inc.

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 182

ISBN-13: 9781589480773

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Describing applications and uses for parcel information in an ArcGIS geodatabase, this book covers the data model developed as a framework for land record information in an ArcGIS environment. Demonstrated is how the model supports real GIS work, including the update and maintenance of data content by tax assessors, planners, recorders, environmental managers, public works officials, safety officials, and others. Land records personnel learn how parcel information can be designed in a geodatabase so work can begin on system design and implementation. The advantages of putting parcel information into a geodatabase are described, and instruction on moving existing applications into the geodatabase is provided. Datasets are included that show how the parcel data model has been easily customized to satisfy different requirements.


Boundary Retracement

Boundary Retracement

Author: Donald A. Wilson

Publisher: CRC Press

Published: 2017-02-17

Total Pages: 483

ISBN-13: 1351662619

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The survey and the transference are the distinctive and operative acts in the transmission of real property and, where they differ from each other, one must of necessity control the other. This book addresses the aforementioned concepts by external explanations in order to understand the discrepancies between them. It also helps to avoid expensive and wasteful litigation over boundaries that were previously not in conflict. The text offers an extensive review of the law for boundary retracement and cites numerous case examples.