Surveying Terms

      • Call - Any feature, landmark, or measurement called out in a survey. For example, "two white oaks next to the creek" is a call.
      • Chain carrier - An assistant to the surveyor, the chain carriers moved the surveying chain from one location to another under the direction of the surveyor. This was a position of some responsibility, and the chain carriers took an oath as "sworn chain carriers" that they would do their job properly.
      • Condition - See Conditional line.
      • Conditional line - An agreed line between neighbors that has not been surveyed.
      • Corner - The beginning or end point of any survey line. The term corner does not imply the property was in any way square.
      • Declination - The difference between magnetic north and geographic (true) north. Surveyors used a compass to determine the direction of survey lines. Compasses point to magnetic north, rather than true north. This declination error is measured in degrees, and can range from a few degrees to ten degrees or more. Surveyors may have been instructed to correct their surveys by a particular declination value. The value of declination at any point on the earth is constantly changing because the location of geographic north is drifting.
      • First station - See Point of Beginning
      • Gore - A thin triangular piece of land, the boundaries of which are defined by surveys of adjacent properties. Loosely, an overlap or gap between properties.
      • Meander - "with the meanders of the stream" means the survey line follows the twists and turns of the stream.
      • Out - An 'out' was ten chains. When counting out long lines, the chain carriers would put a stake at the end of a chain, move the chain and put a stake at the end, and so on until they ran "out" of ten stakes.
      • Point of Beginning - The starting point of the survey 
      • Plat - A drawing of a parcel of land
 

 

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