Survey Legend

O Terms in Land Surveying

O Terms in Land Surveying

O Terms

             O  – Ohio.
             O (Land Status Records)  – Order.
             OAS  – Office of Aircraft Services.
             OCS  – Outer Continental Shelf.
             O&C (Land Status Records)  – Oregon and California (revested lands).
             OE (Land Status Records)  – Open to Entry.
             OG (Land Status Records)  – Oil and gas.
             OK  – Oklahoma.
             OKLA.  – Oklahoma.
             OP. CIT. SUPRA  – An abbreviation for opus citum supra meaning  “in the work cited above.”  Used to avoid repeating
               a full citation when referring to a book previously cited. Sometimes Op. Cit. See SUPRA and INFRA.
             OPER (Land Status Records)  – Operation.
             OR   - Oregon.
             ORE.  – Oregon.
             OS (Land Status Records)  - Oil Shale.

             OBITER DICTUM    – Also called  “dictum.”  That which is said in passing. Where the court, in rationalizing its
               position, uses language broader than is needed for disposition of the point at issue. If the court’s statement is merely
               illustrative or background material not required in the determination of the issues presented, it is within the category
               of obiter dictum. Dictum lacks the force of an adjudication and does not fall within the doctrine of stare decisis. See
               STARE DECISIS and ADJUDICATION.
             OBLIQUE MERCATOR PROJECTION         – A map plotting system in which points on the ellipsoid are
               mathematically projected onto a cylinder oriented tangent to an oblique line at the map center; used in one of the
               Alaska State Plane Coordinates systems.
             OBLITERATED CORNER      – An obliterated corner is one at whose point there are no remaining traces of the
               monument, or its accessories, but whose location has been perpetuated, or the point for which may be recovered
               beyond reasonable doubt, but the acts and testimony of the interested landowners, competent surveyors, or other
               qualified local authorities, or witnesses, or by some acceptable record evidence.
             OCCUPY   – 1) To set a surveying instrument over a point for the purpose of making observations. 2) To take or enter
               upon possession of land.
             O & C EXCHANGE    – An exchange, by the Federal Government, of revested Oregon and California Railroad Co. or
               reconveyed Coos Bay Wagon Road lands for other lands. See O&C LANDS.
             O & C HOMESTEAD ENTRY      – An entry, not exceeding 160 acres, on revested Oregon and California Railroad Co.
               lands which are agricultural in character.
             O & C LANDS  – Public lands in western Oregon which were granted to the Oregon Central railroad companies (later
               the Oregon and California Railroad Co.) to aid in the construction of railroads, but which were later forfeited and
               returned to the Federal Government by Congressional revestment of title. The term  “O and C Lands”  is often used
               to include Coos Bay Wagon Road Lands, which were reconveyed, not revested, lands. See OREGON AND
               CALIFORNIA REVESTED LANDS ADMINISTRATION and COOS BAY WAGON ROAD LANDS.
             O.C.S. OFFICIAL PROTRACTION DIAGRAM       – A drawing showing approved subdivisions of the Outer
               Continental shelf, usually for leasing purposes.
             OFFICIAL CADASTRAL SURVEY       – The public lands are deemed to be surveyed when the survey has been
               accepted and the plat thereof has been filed in the appropriate land office by direction of the Bureau of Land
               Management. No subdivisions of the public lands may be conveyed or in any way disposed of until so identified.
               See ACCEPTED SURVEY.
             OFFICIAL RETURNS    – The Field Notes and Plats of an official cadastral survey accepted and approved by the
               proper authority.
             OFFICIAL SURVEY    – A public land survey which has the field notes approved, the plat accepted, and has been filed
               in the proper BLM land office after publication in the Federal Register, if necessary. See ACCEPTED SURVEY,
               APPROVED SURVEY and MINERAL SURVEY.
             OFF-LINE CLOSING CORNER      – A closing corner monument that was not actually located on the line that was
               closed upon. Such a monument controls the direction of the closing line, but is not its legal terminus.
             OFFSET  – 1) Moving over to a parallel line in order to avoid an obstacle. 2) A process in the running of a parallel of
               latitude by means of a straight line with measured (offset) distances to the curve.
             OMITTED LANDS    – Lands that were in place at the time of survey but are not shown on the original township plat,
               and which are so situated as to have been excluded from the survey by some gross discrepancy in the location of a
               meander line as given by the field-note record. This term is not applicable to areas where changes can be traced to
               erosion, accretion or changes in the water level subsequent to survey. See OMITTED LAND SURVEY.
             OMITTED LAND SURVEY      – The survey of substantial areas of lands fronting surveyed meanders of rivers or lakes,
               which after investigation are known to have been omitted from the original survey through gross error or fraud.
             ONE-EIGHT (1/8) CORNER    – A one-sixteenth (1/16) section corner. The designation  “1/8 corner”  was used in
               some of the older subdivision-of-section surveys.
             ONE THIRTYSECOND (1/32) CORNER      – A one-sixtyfourth (1/64) section corner. The designation  “1/32 corner”
               was used in some of the older subdivision-of-section surveys, especially the 20 acre Indian Allotment surveys.
             OPUS CITUM SUPRA    – In the work cited above. Usually abbreviated  “op. cit. supra”  or  “op. cit.”
             ORDINAL NUMBER     – A number designating the place (as first, second, third) occupied by an item in an ordered
               sequence. There are six principal meridians named ordinal numbers, beginning with the First Principal Meridian.
             ORDINANCE OF MAY 20, 1785    – The first land ordinance, it was entitled  “An Ordinance for ascertaining the mode
               of disposing of lands in the western territory.”   It was adopted by the Continental Congress on May 20, 1785. Under
               its terms the rectangular system of surveys was inaugurated. Six-mile square townships extended north from the
               Ohio River and were numbered south to north. Ranges were numbered east to west. Sections (called lots) were
               numbered from 1 to 36 from south to north in each range with number 1 in the southeast corner. Also included was
               the provision that, in each township, section 16 would be set aside for the maintenance of public schools. See
               SEVEN RANGES, THE; GEOGRAPHER’S LINE, THE.
             ORDINARY HIGH WATER       – When used in reference to tidal waters, synonymous with mean high water. When
               referring to inland streams and lakes it is the same as mean high-water. See HIGH-WATER MARK and MEAN
               HIGH WATER.
             OREGON AND CALIFORNIA REVESTED LANDS ADMINISTRATION              – A branch of the General Land Office
               which was charged with the administration of the O & C and Coos Bay Wagon Road Lands. See O & C LANDS
               and COOS BAY WAGON ROAD LANDS.
             OREGON TERRITORY CESSION       – Under the terms of the Oregon Compromise, in 1846, the territory now
               occupied by the States of Idaho, Oregon and Washington and parts of Montana and Wyoming was ceded to the
               United States by Great Britain. This cession provided the United States with more than 183 million additional acres
               of public lands.
             ORGANIZED MINING DISTRICT      – A section of the country usually designated by name and described or
               understood as being confined within certain natural boundaries, in which the precious metals (or their ores) are
               found in paying quantities, and which is worked therefore, under rules and regulations prescribed or agreed upon by
               the miners therein. See MINERAL DISTRICT and UNORGANIZED MINING DISTRICT.
             ORIGINAL ENTRY    – When application to acquire title to public lands and the applicant is permitted to proceed with
               earning title to the land under the governing laws and regulations. See ENTRY, FINAL ENTRY, CASH ENTRY
               and COMMUTED HOMESTEAD ENTRY.
             ORIGINAL PUBLIC DOMAIN ACQUISITIONS        – All the lands, regardless of whether they are still Federal
               ownership or not, which the Federal Government obtained by cession from the 13 Original States (1789-1802), by
               the Louisiana Purchase (1803), by the cession from Spain (1819), by the occupation of the Oregon Territory (1846),
               by the Mexican Cession (1848), by the purchase from Texas (1850), by the Gadsden Treaty (1853), and by the
                                                                                          th
               purchase of Alaska (1867). The drainage basin of the Red River of the North, south of the 49  parallel and west of
               the cessions by the 13 Original States, is a part of the original public domain. Authorities differ as to the method and
               to the exact date of its acquisition by the United States, some holding that it was part of the Louisiana Purchase. The
               area included within the present boundaries of the State of Tennessee, although included in the cessions of the 13
               Original States, is usually not considered a part of the original public domain because, by the terms of its cession,
               the State of North Carolina passed title to only a small acreage in that area to the United States. The United States in
               turn ceded its unappropriated lands to the State of Tennessee. The submerged lands granted to the states under
               Public Law 31 (the Submerged Lands Act) have been held to be a part of the original public domain (U.S. Supreme
               Court decision of Mar. 15, 1954). See PUBLIC DOMAIN, PUBLIC LANDS and PUBLIC LAND STATES.
             ORIGINAL SURVEY     – A cadastral survey which creates land boundaries and marks them for the first time.
             OUT  – a measurement term used in some field notes and deeds in the early 1800’s, it is the equivalent of 5 chains.
               Tiffin’s 1815 instructions called for the use of  “a two pole chain of 50 links,”  so when the chainman was  “out”  of
               chaining pins he had covered a distance of 5 chains. See POLE AND OUTKEEPER.
             OUTBOUNDARES     – The township and range lines around the perimeter of a survey area, particularly the controlling
               lines around the perimeter of an independent survey.
             OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF       – That portion of the continental shelf seaward of state boundaries as defined in
               the Submerged Lands Act (43 U.S.C.A., sec. 1301 et seq.). It is spoken of, generally, as that part of the continental
               shelf beyond the  “three mile limit.”   It extends from there to the continental talus, a depth of approximately 100
               fathoms. See CONTINENTAL SHELF, CONTINENTAL TALUS, SUBMERGED LANDS ACT and OUTER
               CONTINENTAL SHELF LANDS ACT.
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             OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF LANDS ACT         – Also known as Public Law 212. An act passed during the 1
                             rd
               session of the 83  Congress and signed into law Aug. 7, 1953. It provides for the jurisdiction, control and
               administration by the United States over the submerged lands seaward of the state’s boundaries as defined in the
               Submerged Lands Act (Public Law 31); that is over the outer continental shelf. Senate Report 411, regarding this
               act, made it clear that the outer edge of the shelf is the point where the continental slope leading to the true ocean
               bottom begins and that this point is generally regarded as the depth of approximately 100 fathoms. At the 1958
               Geneva Conference, the Geneva Convention on the Continental Shelf adopted the 100-fathom depth curve as a
               minimum limit and beyond that if exploitation is feasible. See CONTINENTAL SHELF, SUBMERGED LANDS
               ACT, CONTINENTAL TALUS and OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF.
             OUTKEEPER    – On older style surveyor’s compasses, a scale numbered 1 to 16, with a pointer that was turned by a
               milled knob to keep track of the  “Outs” ; 8 Outs equal 40 chains; 16 Outs equal 80 chains. See OUT.
             OUTLINES   – An obsolete term sometimes used in older manuals of surveying instruction to refer to township
               boundaries.
             OUT OF LIMITS   – Exceeds linear and/or angular limits as set forth in the Manual of Surveying Instructions. Also,
               outside rectangular limits. See RECTANGULAR LIMITS.
             OVERFLOWED LANDS      – Lands which are annually or periodically subject to natural flooding during the normal
               planting, growing or harvesting seasons of a region to such an extent that they are rendered wet and unfit for the
               cultivation of the staple crops of that region, unless artificially drained or protected. See SWAMP, SWAMP AND
               OVERFLOWED LANDS and SWAMP LANDS ACTS.
             OVERLAP   – Lands surveyed in conflict. A common area included in separate surveys. That portion of area which one
               survey extends over and covers a part of a different survey as is shown by the evidence on the ground.
             OVERGROWTH     – The growth of a tree as it heals over survey markings. See BARK SCRIBE.

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