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J Terms in Land Surveying

J Terms

              JURIS (Land Status Records)  – Jurisdiction.
             JACOB’S STAFF   – A single staff or pole used for mounting a surveyor’s compass or other instrument. Used instead of
               a tripod, a Jacob’s staff is fitted with a ball-and-socket joint at its upper end, by means of which the instrument is
               adjusted to a level position; the foot is fitted with a metal shoe which facilitates pressing the staff firmly into the
               ground. many of the early land surveys in this country were made with surveyor’s compasses mounted upon Jacob’s
               staffs.
             JAIL-SITE RESERVE  – A reservation of public lands in Alaska, not exceeding 4,000 square feet originally for use as
               a Territorial Jail Site.
             JOINDER OF ACTIONS    – This expression signifies the uniting of two or more demands or rights of action in one
               action or lawsuit.
             JUDGMENT    – In law an official formal decision given by a court, in another meaning, an obligation (as a debt)
               created by the decree of the court.
             JUNIOR CORNER    – A corner which is part of a survey occurring at a date subsequent to a prior (senior) survey.
             JUNIOR LINE   – Survey lines created at different times have different standings. The  “junior”  line would be the line
               created subsequent to an earlier line. See JUNIOR RIGHTS.
             JUNIOR RIGHTS   – Subordinate to the senior rights. The later patent issued usually has the subordinate right in a
               situation where a later survey is in conflict with an earlier survey. The first patent issued usually has the superior
               (senior) right and the second patent usually has the subordinate (junior) right, regardless of the dates of the original
               surveys.
             JUNIOR SURVEY    – A survey made subsequent to an earlier survey. See SENIOR SURVEY.

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I Terms in Land Surveying

I Terms

             IA  – Iowa.  See Iowa Land Surveyors
             IA (Land Status Records)  – Indian Allotment.
             IAS  – Indian Allotment Survey.
             IBID.  – An abbreviation for  “ibidem,”  a Latin term meaning  “in the same place,” “in the same book,” “on the same
               page,”  etc. It usually refers to an immediately preceding citation with an identical page reference. See ID.
             IBLA  – Interior Board of Land Appeals. See BOARD OF LAND APPEALS.
             IC (Land Status Records)  – Interim Conveyance.
             ID.  – Abbreviation for  “idem,”  a Latin term meaning  “the same.”  It indicates an immediately preceding citation but a
               different page reference. See IBID.
             ID  – Idaho.  See Idaho Land Surveyors
             ID (Land Status Records)  – Interior Decisions.
             IDEN (Land Status Records)  – Identify, Identification.
             ID EST  – That is. Commonly abbreviated  “i.e.”
             I.E.  – That is. The common abbreviation for the Latin  “id est.”
             IL  – Illinois.  See Illinois Land Surveyors
             IL (Land status Records)  – Indemnity list.
             ILL.  – Illinois.  See Illinois Land Surveyors
             INC (Land Status Records)  – Including, Inclusive.
             IN  – Indiana.  See Indiana Land Surveyors
             IND.  – Indiana. See Indiana Land Surveyors
             IND FEE (Land Status Records)  – Indian Fee.
             IND HD TR PAT (Land Status Records)  – Indian homestead trust patent.
             IND MER (Land Status Records)  – Indian Meridian.
             IND RES (Land Status Records)  – Indian Reservation.
             IND TR (Land Status Records)  – Indian Trust.
             INTPR (Land Status Records)  – Interpretation.
             IPS  – Iron Pipe Size. Also plural for Iron Post.
             IS (Land Status Records)  – Indemnity selection.
             IT (Land Status Records)  – Isolated tract.
             IMPERCEPTIBLE    – See Gradual & Imperceptible.
             INCHOATE   – Imperfect; partial; unfinished. Begun but not completed; as a contract not signed by all the parties or a
               wife’s interest in the lands of her husband during his life, which may become a right of dower upon his death. See
               DOWER.
             INCHOATE TITLE    – The beginning of a title or one not yet perfected into a legal title. When only a portion of the
               requirements for title has been completed, the title is  “inchoate.”
             INCORPOREAL PROPERTY       – That which cannot be seen or touched. Property, such as a right, which exists only in
               contemplation, as distinguished from corporeal property which has a material existence and which may be seen and
               touched. See CORPOREAL.
             INCREMENT BORER      – Sometimes called increment boring tool, it is a tool used to cut a plug from a tree to permit a
               count of the growth rings in determining the age of the tree.
             INDEMNITY LANDS     – Alternate lands granted to states under the public land laws when granted lands were
               unavailable. See INDEMNITY LIMITS, SCHOOL-LAND INDEMNITY SELECTION and LIEU LANDS.
             INDEMNITY LIMITS    – In railroad and wagon road grants, the strips of land lying within a specified distance on each
               side of, and adjacent to, the primary limits, within which the grantee could make lieu selections for lands lost to the
               grantee in the primary limits; also, the outside boundaries of these strips. See RAILROAD LIEU SELECTION.
             INDEMNITY SCHOOL SELECTION        – See SCHOOL-LAND INDEMNITY SELECTION.
             INDEMNITY SELECTION      – See LIEU SELECTION.
             INDENTURE   – In conveyancing, formal written instrument made between two or more persons; the name is derived
               from the ancient practice of indenting or cutting the deed in a waving or saw-tooth line. In this way a part could be
               proved genuine by the way in which it fit into the angles cut into the other part.
             INDEPENDENT RESURVEY       – An official rerunning and remarking intended to supersede the records of the original
               survey and establish new section lines and subdivisions on public lands only. Any patented lands involved must be
               identified and segregated according to the original survey. Only remaining areas of the public lands may be
               resurveyed without regard to the original survey. See DEPENDENT RESURVEY and RESURVEY.
             INDEX CORRECTION     – 1) As used in the resurvey of the public lands, an average error in the lines of the original
               survey. The average error in the lines of an original survey (if conclusive) may be in alinement, or measurement, or
               both. 2) A correction applied to a reading to compensate for displacement of the zero mark.
             INDIAN ALLOTMENT     – An allocation of a parcel of public lands or Indian reservation lands to an Indian for his
               individual use; also, the lands so allocated.
             INDIAN CLAIMS COMMISSION ACT       – The act of Aug. 13, 1946, under which Indian claims to land based upon
               fair and honorable dealings that are not recognized by any existing rule of law or equity may be submitted to the
               Commission with right of judicial review by the United States Court of Claims.
             INDIAN EXCHANGE     – See INDIAN RESERVATION EXCHANGE.
             INDIAN FEE PATENT    – An Indian patent which conveys fee title.
             INDIAN HOMESTEAD ENTRY       – A homestead entry which is made by an Indian.
             INDIAN LANDS   – See CEDED INDIAN LANDS and INDIAN RESERVATION.
             INDIAN MERIDIAN    – The principal meridian which governs surveys in all of Oklahoma except the “panhandle;” it
               was adopted in 1870.
             INDIAN PATENT   – A patent which is issued to an Indian.
             INDIAN POWER RESERVE      – A power-site reserve within an Indian reservation.
             INDIAN PUEBLO    – An Indian reservation for the Pueblo Indians in New Mexico.
             INDIAN PUEBLO ENTRY     – A claim by a non-Indian for a patent to land within an Indian pueblo.
             INDIAN RESERVATION     – Lands reserved for the use of native Indians and, in Alaska, for Aleuts and Eskimos.
             INDIAN RESERVATION EXCHANGE        – An exchange whereby the Federal Government receives title to lands
               within an Indian reservation.
             INDIAN TRUST PATENT     – An Indian patent which is issued with the condition that title to the land remains for a
               specified period of time in the United States in trust for the patentee.
             INDICATED CORNER     – A term adopted by the USGS to designate a corner of the public land surveys whose
               location cannot be verified by the criteria necessary to class it as a found or existent corner, but which is accepted
               locally as the correct corner and whose location is perpetuated by such marks as fence-line intersections, piles of
               rock, and states or pipes driven into the ground, which have been recovered by field investigation. See
               OBLITERATED CORNER.
             INDIRECT MEASUREMENT       – Determination of a distance using a method, i.e., triangulation or traverse, which
               employs both direct measurement and calculation. Also, determination of distance by use of photogrammetry, or
               timed travel of light or sound waves. See DIRECT MEASUREMENT.
             INDIVIDUAL LIEU SELECTION, RAILROAD       – See RAILROAD LIEU SELECTION.
             IN FEE  – Ownership in land. See FEE SIMPLE.
             INFORMATIVE TRAVERSE       – A survey made to obtain topographic data or to define the present river bank in front
               of patented lands. In the second case the informative traverse is used to apportion the lands formed by accretion to
               the public lands.
             INFRA  – Below. Under. When used in text it refers to matter in a later part of the publication. See SUPRA, OP. CIT.
               SUPRA.
             INGRESS  – The right to enter a tract of land. In the law of riparian rights, the right of return to his land from navigable
               water which a riparian owner enjoys. See ACCESS, EGRESS, INGRESS.
             INGRESS, EGRESS AND REGRESS      – These words express the right of a lessee to enter, go upon, and return from
               the lands in question. See ACCESS, EGRESS and INGRESS.
             INITIAL MONUMENT     – A physical structure which marks the location of an initial point in the rectangular system
               of surveys. See INITIAL POINT.
             INITIAL POINT  – A point which is established under the rectangular system of surveys and from which is initiated
               the cadastral survey of the principal meridian and base line that controls the cadastral survey of the public lands
               within a given area. See PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, BASE LINE, RECTANGULAR SYSTEM OF SURVEYS and
               INITIAL MONUMENT.
             INITIAL POINT OF A METES AND BOUNDS SURVEY        – Also called  “beginning point.”  In a survey such as the
               survey of the boundaries of an Indian reservation, each angle point is monumented and assigned a number. The
               numbers are in series with number 1 at the initial point.
             INITIAL POINT, PUBLIC LAND SURVEYS WITHOUT        – There are eight public-land surveys, seven in Ohio and
               one in Indiana, which have no initial point as origin for township and range numbers. They are: The Ohio River
               Survey, started in 1785, in which townships are numbered North from the Ohio River and ranges are numbered
               West from the west boundary of Pennsylvania; The U.S. Military Survey, started in 1797, in which townships are
               numbered North from the south boundary of the military grant and ranges are numbered West from the west
               boundary of the Seven Ranges; The West of the Great Miami, started in 1798, in which townships are numbered
               North from the Great Miami River and the ranges are numbered East from the Ohio-Indiana boundary; The Ohio
               River Base (Indiana), started in 1799, in which the townships are numbered North from the Ohio River and the
               ranges are numbered from the Ohio-Indiana boundary and its projection south; The Scioto River Base, started in
               1799, in which the townships are numbered North from the Scioto River and the ranges are numbered West from the
               west boundary of Pennsylvania; The Muskingum River Survey, started in 1800, in which the townships are
               numbered 1 and 2 and the range in number 10; The Between the Miamis, north of Symmes Purchase, started in
               1802, in which the townships are numbered EAST from the Great Miami River and the ranges are numbered
               NORTH from the Ohio River (as a continuation of the numbering of Symmes Purchase) and the Twelve-Mile-
               Square Reserve, started in 1805, in which the townships are numbered 1,2,3 and 4 and there is no range number.
             INLAND WATERS     – Such waters as canals, lakes, rivers, watercourses, inlets and bays, exclusive of the open sea,
               though the water in question may open or empty into the ocean.
             IN PRAESENTI   – At the present time. The Swamp Lands Act of 1850 is an example of a grant taking effect  in
               praesenti , that is, on the date of the passage of the act.
             INSTRUMENT    – An angle measuring device such as a compass, transit or theodolite. See INSTRUMENT, LEGAL.
             INSTRUMENT, LEGAL     – A written document. A formal or legal document in writing, such as a contract, deed,
               lease, will, bond or other writing of a formal or solemn character, such as a document given as a means of affording
               evidence. See DOCUMENT.
             INTEREST   – As applied to lands,  “interest”  means any direct or indirect ownership in whole or in part of the lands
               and resources of the lands. It includes any participation in the earnings therefrom, or the right to occupy or use the
               property or to take any benefits therefrom based upon lease or rental agreements, or upon any formal of informal
               contract with a person who has such an interest. It includes membership in a firm, or ownership of stock or other
               securities in a corporation which has such an interest.
             INTERIOR ANGLE*.
             INTERIOR BOARD OF LAND APPEALS       – See BOARD OF LAND APPEALS.
             INTERIOR DECISIONS    – Decisions of the Department of the Interior. Prior to 1932 these decisions were called
               “Land Decisions”  and included volumes 1 thru 52. Since 1932 they have been published and referred to as  “Interior
               Decisions,”  and are cited thus: 60 I.D. 85. See LAND DECISIONS and BOARD OF LAND APPEALS.
             INTERNAL IMPROVEMENT GRANT         – A grant made to aid in the construction of roads, canals, railroads, or for
               other public improvements.
             INTERPRETATION OF PLAT      – Deductions which are based on symbols, bearings, areas and dates of approval
               shown on plats and which are used to determine the probable intention when information is missing or ambiguous,
               or when data shown on various plats needs clarification. See PROTECT THE PLAT.
             INTERROGATORIES     – A set or series of questions drawn up in writing for the purpose of being propounded to a
               party in equity, a garnishee, or a witness whose testimony is taken on deposition. In taking evidence on depositions,
               the interrogatories are usually prepared and settled by counsel, and reduced to writing prior to the examination. See
               DEPOSITION.
             INTERSECTION    – 1) The method of establishing the legal center of section and the centers of the various quarter
               sections. 2) The point at which a survey line passes through an object, such as a tree. 3) The point of crossing of two
               or more survey lines with each other, usually a junior line crossing a senior line. 4) The legal point of closing where
               a junior line closes on a senior (fixed) line. 5) The confluence of two or more streams of water. 6) The cutting or
               crossing in any combination of straight lines, curves, or semitangents to curves. 7) Area where two streets or roads
               intersect, generally including the space enclosed by the right-of-way lines as extended plus any transition curved
               boundaries. See LINE TREE, JUNIOR LINE, SENIOR LINE, INTERSECTION* AND CONFLUENCE*.
             INTESTATE   – Without making a will. A person is said to die  “intestate”  when he dies without leaving a valid will to
               testify what his wishes were with respect to the disposal of his property after his death. The word is also used to
               signify the person himself, as  “the intestate’s property.”
             INTRALIMITAL RIGHTS     – In mining, rights extending downward within the limits of the claim to center of the
               earth. All surface rights and everything within the limits of his intralimital rights, except the extralateral rights
           &nnbsp;   attached to other veins apexing in another’s claim, belong to the owner of the claim. There are no rights to explore in
               another’s land or to approach the vein from any location other than the vein itself. If veins intersect, all the ore
               within the intersection belongs to the senior claimant, but a right of way through the intersection is assured. See
               EXTRALATERAL RIGHTS.
             INURE  – To take effect; to result. Provide service to the use or benefit of a person.
             INVESTIGATIVE SURVEY     – A preliminary survey made to determine the physical condition of existing Cadastral
               Survey evidence.
             IPSO FACTO   – By the mere fact itself.
             IPSO JURE  – By the law itself; by the mere operation of the law.
             IRON POST  – The iron post adopted by BLM for monumenting the surveys of the public lands evolved after passage
               of the 1908 act which provided for the purchase of the 1908 act which provided for the purchase of metal
               monuments to be used for public-land survey corners wherever practicable. Specifications for the brass-capped
               survey marker call for zinc-coated pipe cut to 30-inch lengths. One end of the pipe is split and the two halves are
               spread to form flanges. The dimension from the top of the pipe to the top of the brass cap is from � to � inch. The
               measurement from tip to tip of the flanges is specified at 4� inches. The measurement from the foot of the flange to
               the top of the marker is 28 inches, more or less. The inside diameter of the pipe is 2 inches. The weight is
               approximately 9 pounds. The words  “U.S. DEPT. OF THE INTERIOR BUR. OF LAND MANAGEMENT –
               UNLAWFUL TO DISTRUB – CADASTRAL SURVEY”      and (at least for the next several years), the numerals “19,”
               are cast into the brass cap.
             IRREGULAR    – As applied to units of the rectangular system, exceeding the rectangular limits.
             IRREGULAR BOUNDARY       – Township or section lines not originally established as straight lines or which a
               retracement reveals as not having been surveyed as a straight line. See IRREGULAR BOUNDARY
               ADJUSTMENT.
             IRREGULAR BOUNDARY ADJUSTMENT          – A modified form of single proportionate measurement used in
               restoring some lost corners. Sometimes considered as a Broken Boundary Adjustment. See IRREGULAR
               BOUNDARY, BROKEN BOUNDARY ADJUSTMENT and ADJUSTMENT*.
             IRREGULAR SECTION     – A section having two or more adjacent boundaries, as returned on the original survey, that
               are not within 0� 21’ of cardinal or exceed 25 links from 40 chains in measurement.
             ISLAND  – A body of land extending above and completely surrounded by water at ordinary high water. See
               ORDINARY HIGH WATER and ISLAND*.
             ISOLATED TRACT    – a parcel of vacant public lands, not exceeding *1,520 acres, which is surrounded by
               appropriated lands.

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H Terms in Land Surveying

H Terms

             HB  – Handbook. If in a citation, it means  “House Bill.”
             HDQ S (Land Status Records)  – Headquarters Site.
             HDS (Land Status Records)  – Homestead declaratory statement.
             HE (Land Status Records)  – Homestead entry.
             HES (Land Status Records)  – Homestead entry survey.
             HI  – Hawaii. See Hawaii Land Surveyors
             HI (Land Status Records)  – Historical Index. Se HI*.
             HUM MER (Land Status Records)  – Humboldt Meridian.
             HUNTS MER (Land Status Records)  – Huntsville Meridian.
             HWY (Land Status Records)  – Highway.
             HACK   – A horizontal notch cut well into a tree at about breast height. In a cadastral survey, two hacks are cut to
               distinguish them from other, accidental marks. A vertical section of the finished hack marks resembles a double-V
               extending across a tree from two to six inches, depending on the diameter of the tree.
               The  “blaze”  and  “hack”  marks are equally permanent, but so different in character that one mark should never be
               mistaken for the other.
               Hacks are sometimes called  “notches”  or, in older surveys,  “chaps.”  See BLAZE.
             HALF  – A fractional part of a regular section subdivision determined according to equally divided linear measurements
               without consideration of the areas of the halves.
               Half a regular section consists of any two quarter sections which have a common boundary, divided by a line
               between opposite � corners.
               In past years, patents for half of a Government lot have been erroneously issued. The division line was determined
               by equally divided linear measurements without regard to the actual area of the halves.
               In private land exchanges, it is generally presumed that a conveyance for half of a parcel grants half the area unless
               otherwise stated.
             HALF-MILE POSTS    – In early survey practice, in parts of Alabama and Florida, so-called  “half-mile posts”  were
               established. In some cases the  “half-mile post”  was not at mid-point on the section line. In other cases the  “half-mile
               post”  was in true position for the quarter-section corner. In still other instances the  “half-mile post”  was not on true
               line nor at mid-point on the line. Each set of field notes regarding  “half-mile posts”  require individual consideration,
               as the survey practices were not uniform even within the same surveying district.
             HALF-RANGE NUMBERS      – In the instances where the distance between the regular position for township
               boundaries is so great that the application of normal rules would result in sections elongated in excess of 120 chains,
               half-range (or half-township) numbers may be created. Also used for identifying areas left unsurveyed by hiatus. See
               HALF-TOWNSHIP NUMBERS.
             HALF SECTION    – See SECTION, HALF.
             HALF-TIDE LEVEL   – See MEAN TIDE LEVEL.
             HALF-TOWNSHIP NUMBERS       – In the rare cases where the distance between the regular position for township
               boundaries is so great that the application of normal rules would result in sections elongated in excess of 120 chains,
               half-township (or half-range) numbers may be created. Also used for identifying areas left unsurveyed by hiatus. See
               HALF-RANGE NUMBERS.
             HARMONIOUSLY RELATED       – Conditions existing during the corner restoration process when a corner point under
               consideration reasonably conforms in position to that indicated by evidence at other corners of the survey,
               considering both the record and the survey conditions.
             HAWAII ANNEXATION     – The Republic of Hawaii was formally annexed to the United States by the voluntary
               action of its citizens and a joint resolution of Congress approved July 7, 1898. The transfer of sovereignty took place
               August 12, 1898. Since Hawaii had been an independent nation, it was not a public-land state.
             HEADING   – In mining, a preliminary passageway driven for exploratory purposes or to facilitate future work. Also,
               the forward end of a drift or tunnel.
             HEADQUARTERS ENTRY       – A cash entry of 5 acres or less of public lands in Alaska which are used as a
               headquarters for a productive industry.
             HEADQUARTERS SITE     – Five acres or less of public lands in Alaska which are used as, and are subject to entry as,
               headquarters for a productive industry.
             HEARING   – Opportunity for testimony and presentation of evidence at proceedings ordered and held pursuit to
               U.S.D.I. Hearing Procedures (43 C.F.R. 1850). (See 43 C.F.R. part 4)
             HEAVE  – In mining, the horizontal distance between the parts of a vein that have been separated by a fault, measured
               along the strike of the fault. A vertical fault can have no  heave , and a horizontal fault can have no  throw.  See
               THROW.
             HEAVY BEARING     – A survey slang term for a bearing which departs markedly from cardinal. A bearing of 2 or more
               degrees from cardinal may be considered a  “heavy”  bearing.  “Strong bearing”  is used synonymously.
             HECTARE   – A metric unit of area equal to 100 ares or 2.471 acres.
             HEREDITAMENT     – Property subject to inheritance. See PROPERTY.
             HIATUS  – An area between two surveys, the record of which describes them as having one or more common boundary
               lines with no omission. See OVERLAP and HIATUS*.
             HIGH WATER    – 1) The maximum height or stage reached by rising water. 2) (NOS) The maximum height reached by
               a rising tide. The height may be due solely to the periodic tidal forces or it may have superimposed on it the effects
               of prevailing meteorological conditions.
             HIGH WATER LINE (NOS)    – The intersection of the land with the water surface at an elevation of high water.
             HIGH WATER MARK      – 1) The line which the water impresses on the soil by covering it for sufficient periods to
               deprive it of upland vegetation. 2) (NOS) A line or mark left upon tide flats, beach, or alongshore objects indicating
               the elevation of the intrusion of high water. The mark may be a line of oil or scum on alongshore objects, or a more
               or less continuous deposit of fine shell or debris on the foreshore or berm. This mark is physical evidence of the
               general height reached by wave run-up at recent high waters. It should not be confused with the mean high water

               line or mean higher high water line. See LOW WATER MARK and ORDINARY HIGH WATER. For tidal
               conditions, See MEAN HIGH WATER and MEAN LOW WATER.
             HIGHWAY ABANDONMENT        – Non-use of public roads, usually defined by statute law in the various states.
             HISTORICAL INDEX    – A chronological summary of all actions which affect, have affected, or will affect the title to,
               disposition of, or use status of lands and resources within a township. See LAND STATUS RECORDS.
             HISTORIC COAST LINE    – The coast line position at date of statehood from which seaward distances may be
               measured to determine territorial waters of some States, Florida and Texas for example.
             HOME-SITE ENTRY     – The terms of the Act of May 14, 1898, provided for each entry of 5 acres or less of public
               lands in Alaska used for residence purposes.
             HOMESTEAD ENTRY      – An entry under the United States land laws for the purpose of acquiring title to a portion of
               the public domain under the homestead laws, consisting of an affidavit of the claimant’s right to enter, a formal
               application for the land, and payment of the money required.
             HOMESTEAD ENTRY, ORIGINAL       – An original entry under the homestead laws, also, the first homestead entry
               which was made by any individual, also, a homestead entry which was made pursuant to the first homestead law, the
               act of May 20, 1862 (12 Stat. 392) as codified in Sec. 2289 of the Revised Statutes. A second homestead entry was
               permitted under specific conditions as provided in the public land laws.
             HOMESTEAD ENTRY SURVEY        – A metes and bounds of lands entered under the Act of June 11, 1906 (34 Stat
               233), as amended.
             HOMESTEAD SETTLEMENT, ALASKA         – Settlement, for homestead purposes, of unsurveyed or surveyed public
               land in Alaska according to the provisions of the Act of May 14, 1898 (30 Stat. 409; 48 U.S.C. 371; 43 C.F.R.
               Subpart 2567 et. seq.), as amended, which extended the homestead laws to Alaska. All homestead claims in Alaska
               must be perfected in accordance with the 3-year homestead law of June 6, 1912 (37 Stat. 123; 43 U.S.C. 164, 169,
               218).
             HOVERSIGHT*
             HUMBOLDT MERIDIAN      – The principal meridian governing surveys in northwestern California; it was adopted in
               1853.
             HUNTSVILLE MERIDIAN      – The principal meridian governing surveys in northern Alabama and a small part of
               Mississippi; it was adopted in 1807.
             HYDROGRAPHIC DIVIDE      – Ridge or elevated land area which separates the direction of flow of streams and rivers.
               The division of the watersheds. See CONTINENTAL DIVIDE.

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G Terms in Land Surveying

G Terms

            GA  – Georgia. See Georgia Land Surveyors
             GD (Land Status Records)  – Gold.
             GEO (Land Status Records)  – Geothermal.
             GEOL STR (Land Status Records)  – Geologic structure.
             GLO (Land Status Records)  – General Land Office.
             GR DIST (Land Status Records)  – Grazing District.
             GR LIC (Land Status Records)  – Grazing license.
             GR LSE (Land Status Records)  – Grazing lease.
             GR PER (Land Status Records)  – Grazing permit.
             GSR MER (Land Status Records)  – Gila and Salt River Meridian.
             GADSDEN PURCHASE      – A purchase from Mexico in 1853 to settle a question as to the limits of the Mexican
               Cession of 1848. James Gadsden, a South Carolina railroad promoter negotiated for the acquisition of 19 million
               acres of additional land and the settlement of the claims. The territory acquired lies in the States of Arizona and New
               Mexico. See GADSDEN TREATY.
             GADSDEN TREATY     – The December 30, 1853, treaty with Mexico, under the terms of which the United States
               acquired territory now in the States of Arizona and New Mexico. the territory thus acquired is commonly called the
               GADSDEN PURCHASE.
             GENERAL LAND OFFICE      – The agency which was formerly responsible for the execution of the public-land laws
               relating to cadastral surveys, land disposals, and to various other activities with respect to the administration and
               management of the public lands. It was established as a unit of the Treasury Department in 1812, and so remained
               until 1949, when it became a part of the newly created Department of the Interior. It was abolished in 1946 when its
               functions were combined with those of the Grazing Service to become the Bureau of Land Management.
             GEODETIC AZIMUTH      – The horizontal angle at station A measured from a north south plane (perpendicular to the
               reference ellipsoid) clockwise to an ellipsoidal normal section passing through station B. Geodetic azimuth is
               determined by applying a correction to astronomic azimuth or by computations on the reference ellipsoid. The
               azimuth from A toward B is the forward azimuth while the azimuth from B toward A is the back azimuth of station
               B. See  GEODETIC*.
             GEODETIC CONTROL  – A system of monumented stations having known, precise positions established by geodetic
               methods.
             GEODETIC COORDINATES       – Quantities which define a horizontal position on an ellipsoid of reference with
               respect to a geodetic datum. See GEOGRAPHIC COORDINATES.
             GEODETIC DATUM     – A reference for geodetic survey measurements consisting of fixed latitude, longitude and
   &nbnbsp;           azimuth values associated with a defined station as well as two constants for an ellipsoid of reference. See NORTH
               AMERICAN DATUM OF 1927.
             GEODETIC POSITION     – A position of a point on the surface of the earth expressed in terms of geodetic latitude and
               geodetic longitude. A geodetic position implies an adopted geodetic datum. In a complete record of a geodetic
               position, the datum must be stated. See GEOGRAPHIC POSITION.
             GEODETIC SURVEY     – A precise survey of considerable extent which takes into account the shape of the earth.
             GEOGRAPHER OF THE UNITED STATES        – The only man to hold this title was Thomas Hutchins. He was
               appointed to the position under the terms of the Ordinance of May 20, 1785. The office was created for the
               supervision of the cadastral survey of the Territory Northwest of the Ohio River according to the rectangular system
               adopted by the Continental Congress under the ordinance. The east-west line at the north of  “The Seven Ranges”  is
               named  “The Geographer’s Line”  in his honor. His successor, Rufus Putnam, was given the title  “Surveyor General
               of the Northwest Territory”  under the terms of the Act of May 18, 1796. See ORDINANCE OF MAY 20, 1785,
               THE SEVEN RANGES, ACT OF MAY 18, 1796, THE GEOGRAPHER’S LINE, SURVEYOR GENERAL,
               UNITED STATES SUPERVISOR OF SURVEYS and CHIEF, DIVISION OF CADASTRAL SURVEY.
             GEOGRAPHER’S LINE, THE     – The first line surveyed under the rectangular system. This line, which extends the
               width of the Seven Ranges (42 miles), is named for Thomas Hutchins, the Geographer of the United States.
                  Under the Ordinance of May 20, 1785, the geographer was to  “personally attend to the running of”  a line westward
               from the  “Point of Beginning.”
             GEOGRAPHIC COORDINATES (U.S.C. & G.S. Sp. PUB. 242)    – An inclusive term, used to designate both
               geodetic coordinates and astronomic coordinates.
             GEOGRAPHIC MIDDLE OF A RIVER       – See MEDIUM FILUM ACQUAE.
             GEOGRAPHIC POSITION      – The coordinates of a point on the surface of the earth expressed in terms of latitude and
               longitude, either geodetic or astronomic.
                  In determining the geographic positions of monuments of the public land surveys, reference is made to USC & GS,
               NGS, USGS, or other acceptably determined stations.
             GEOID  – The figure of the earth considered as a mean sea-level surface extended continuously through the continents.
               See SPHEROID and GEOID*.
             GEOLOGICAL SURVEYS. (GLO)      – The first Geological Surveys of the public lands were initiated in 1844 by the
               General Land Office, in Michigan. Similar surveys were made in Wisconsin and Iowa during 1847; in Oregon and
               Washington during 1853; in Nebraska, Colorado and Wyoming during 1857. All such surveys were performed
               under private contracts. The Geological Survey was not established as a bureau of the Department of the Interior
               until 1879.
             GILA AND SALT RIVER MERIDIAN      – The principal meridian governing surveys in nearly all of Arizona; it was
               adopted in 1865.
             GORE  – A hiatus. See HIATUS and GORE*.
             GOVERNING BOUNDARIES       – Usually the south and east boundaries of a township, but may be termed the
               satisfactorily surveyed lines on which subdivisions are to be based. In rare and extreme cases, therefore, an irregular
               township may be without a single governing boundary.
             GOVERNING SECTION LINE      – A township subdivision line ran as the controlling boundary to rectify a defective
               township exterior. The line is surveyed on a bearing calculated to intersect the controlling corner on the opposite
               boundary. The last mile is run random and true. Completion of the subdivision of a township is based upon this
               boundary. See GUIDE MERIDIAN, SECTIONAL GUIDE MERIDIAN, STANDARD PARALLEL and
               SECTIONAL CORRECTION LINE.
             GOVERNMENT CONTEST       – See CONTEST.
             GOVERNMENT LOT      – See LOT.
             GRADIENT   – Rate of rise or fall, as “5% gradient,” meaning a 5-foot vertical rise in a 100-foot horizontal distance
               (also recorded as 0.05). See GRADIENT BOUNDARY.
             GRADIENT BOUNDARY      – A boundary determined by the position of flowing water along a bank. First announced
               in Oklahoma vs. Texas by the U.S. Supreme Court (265 US 493), as follows:  “The boundary line is a gradient of
               flowing water in the river. It is located midway between the lower level of the flowing water that just reaches the
               cut-bank and the higher level of it that just does not overtop the cut-bank.. The physical top of the cut-bank, being
               very uneven in profile, cannot be a datum for locating the boundary line but a gradient along the bank must be used
               for that purpose. The highest point on the gradient must not be higher than the lowest acceptable point on the bank
               in that vicinity.”
             GRADUAL AND IMPERCEPTIBLE        – Describes changes in riparian lands that bring them within the scope of the
               doctrine of accretion and erosion. The test of what is gradual and imperceptible has been held to be that  “though the
               witnesses may see, from time to time, that progress has been made, they could not perceive it while the progress was
               going on.”  See RIPARIAN LANDS, ACCRETION, RELICTION and EROSION.
             GRANT   – Lands, title to which has been confirmed or conferred to the United States for a particular reason or purpose.
               See GRANT IN PLACE, QUANTITY GRANT and PRIVATE LAND GRANT.
             GRANT BOUNDARY ADJUSTMENT         – A mathematical distribution of the closing error which consists of a
               uniform rotation and scale change of the record courses to conform to the retracment value between the controlling
               corners. See BROKEN BOUNDARY ADJUSTMENT, ADJUSTMENT* and CLOSING ERROR.
             GRANTEE   – A person, firm or corporation to whom land, easements or other habiliments thereof are conveyed or
               granted.

             GRANT IN PLACE    – A grant in connection with which the Congress specifically states, or implies, the legal
               description of the public lands which are granted. See QUANTITY GRANT, PLACE LANDS and INDEMNITY
               LANDS.
             GRANT IN PRAESENTI    – See IN PRAESENTI.
             GRANTOR    – a person, firm or corporation granting or conveying land, easements or other habiliments thereof.
             GRANT, QUANTITY     – See QUANTITY GRANT.
             GRAZING SERVICE    – The agency formerly responsible for the administration of grazing on public lands which had
               been designated as grazing district lands. Organized in the Department of the Interior after the passage, in 1934, of
               the Taylor Grazing Act, it was abolished in 1946 when its functions were consolidated with those of the General
               Land Office and transferred to the newly created Bureau of Land Management.
             GREAT CIRCLE*.
             GREENWICH MERIDIAN      – The Prime Meridian. The meridian which passes through the original site of the Royal
               Observatory at Greenwich, England was adopted in 1884 by a conference of nations as the initial or zero of
               longitudes. From it other longitudes are reckoned east and west. See WASHINGTON MERIDIAN.
             GRID AZIMUTH    – The angle in the plane of projection between a straight line and the central meridian (y-axis) of a
               plane-rectangular coordinate system. Although essentially a map quantity, a grid azimuth may, by mathematical
               processes, be transformed into a geodetic azimuth.
             GRID BEARING    – The smaller angle in the plane of projection between a line and a north-south grid line. Grid
               bearings are determined only by mathematical computations or by applying corrections to geodetic azimuths. See
               BEARING, BACK BEARING, GEODETIC AZIMUTH and GRID AZIMUTH.
             GRID LENGTH    – The distance between two points as obtained by inverse computation from the plane-rectangular
               coordinates of the points. In the state coordinate systems, a grid length differs from a geodetic length by the amount
               of a correction based on the scale factor for the given line.
             GROIN  – A shore protective structure, narrow in width, usually built perpendicular to the shore for purposes of
               trapping littoral drift, or to protect the shore from erosion. Sometimes incorrectly called a dike. See DIKE.
             GROOVES   – Elongated depressions scored into the face of a stone monument where the faces of the stone are turned
               to the cardinal. See NOTCHES.
             GROUP NUMBER     – A filing and record-keeping system whereby a particular cadastral survey project is identified,
               i.e., Group 123, Wyoming. Since the beginning of the Direct System, all cadastral survey projects authorized under
               one specific set of instructions have been referred to by their  “Group number.”
             GUARANTEE OF TITLE     – A certification which insures that the title exists in fact as described. Often issued by
               title-guarantee companies or by the state, as in the case of a Land Court certificate. See LAND COURT.
             GUIDE LINE  – An obsolete term for random line.
             GUIDE MERIDIAN    – An auxiliary governing line projected north along an astronomical meridian, from points
               established on the base line or a standard parallel, usually at intervals of 24 miles east or west of the principal
               meridian, on which township, section, and quarter-section corners are established. See AUXILIARY GUIDE
               MERIDIAN.

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F Terms in Surveying

F Terms

             F.2d –  In a citation, as 22 F.2d 100, means Federal Reporter, Second Series.
             FAA (Land Status Records)  – Federal Aviation Administration.
             FBX MER (Land Status Records ) – Fairbanks Meridian.
             FC (Land Status Records)  – Final Certificate.
             FED (Land Status Records)  – Federal.
             FED  – Federal. If shown as a citation [198 Fed. 125 (1912)], it means  “Federal Reporter.”
             FF LSE (Land Status Records)  – Fur farm lease.
             FFMC (Land Status Records)  – Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation.
             FHA (Land Status Records)  – Farmers Home Administration.
             FIS (Land Status Records)  – Fissionable materials.
             FL  – Florida.  See Florida Land Surveyors
             FLA.  – Florida.  See Florida Land Surveyors
             FLPMA   – Federal Land Policy and Management Act, of 1976.
             FLS (Land Status Records)  – Forest lieu selection.
             FLUP  – Free land use permit.
             FM U (Land Status Records)  – Farm unit.
             FPA (Land Status Records)  – Federal Power act.
             FPAS ACT  – The Federal Property and Administration Services Act of 1949, as amended, sets forth the basic
               contracting procedures and principles which all civilian agencies must follow.
             FPC (Land Status Records)  – Federal Power Commission.
             FPR  – Federal Procurement Regulations.
             FR (Land Status Records)  – Federal Register.
             FRAC (Land Status Records)  – Fractional.
             FRAC INT PAT (Land Status Records)  – Fractional Interest patent.
             FS (Land Status Records)  – Forest Service.
             F. SUPP . – Federal Supplement.
             FUP (Land Status Records)  – Free use permit.
             F&WS (Land Status Records)  – Fish and Wildlife Service.
             FX (Land Status Records)  – Forest Exchange.
             FAIRBANKS MERIDIAN     – The principal meridian governing surveys in east-central Alaska; it was adopted in 1910.
             FALLING   – The distance by which a random line falls to the right or left of a corner on which the true line is to close.
               Usually the direction of falling is expressed as cardinal.
             FEDERAL LAND    – All classes of land owned by the Federal Government.
             FEDERAL POWER PROJECT RESERVATION          – A reservation of public lands for use in connection with a power
               development project under the jurisdiction of the Federal Power Commission.
             FEDERAL PROCUREMENT REGULATIONS           – The regulations issued by the General Services Administration
               implementing the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act.
             FEDERAL PROPERTY AND ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES ACT OF 1949            – This law, as amended, sets forth
               the basic contracting procedures and principles which all civilian agencies must follow.
             FEE  – The true meaning of the word  “fee”  is the same as that of  “feud”  or  “fief,”  and in its original sense it is
               distinguished from  “allodium,”  which is defined as a man’s own land, possessed in his own right, without owing
               any rent or service to any superior. In modern English tenures,  “fee”  means an estate of inheritance clear of any
               condition, limitation, or restriction to particular heirs, but descendable to the heirs in general, male or female, lineal
               or collateral. In American law, the terms  “fee,” “fee simple”  and  “fee simple absolute”  are equivalent. See FEE
               SIMPLE, FEE TAIL.
             FEE SIMPLE   – The estate which a man has where lands are owned by him and his heirs absolutely, with
               unconditional power of disposition during his life, and descending to his heirs and legal representatives upon his
               death intestate. Fee simple title to public lands in conveyed by a patent, approved clear list, deed or grant without
               condition. See APPROVED CLEAR LIST, PATENT, DEED, GRANT, and INTESTATE.
             FEE TAIL  – An estate limited to one class of heirs.
             FIELD EXAMINATION     – An on-the-ground investigation of certain public lands in regard to valuation, land use,
               application for entry, mineralization, etc. See FIELD EXAMINATION (Prior to 1910 and FIELD EXAMINER
               (Prior to 1910).
             FIELD EXAMINATION (Prior to 1910)  – A method of checking public land survey field work under the contract
               system. See FIELD EXAMINER (Prior to 1910), CONTRACT SYSTEM, DIRECT SYSTEM and FIELD
               EXAMINATION.
             FIELD EXAMINER (Prior to 1910)  – A surveyor who was employed by the Government to inspect the accuracy and
               authenticity of contract surveyors’ work. See FIELD EXAMINATION, FIELD EXAMINATION (Prior to 1910),
               CONTRACT SYSTEM and DIRECT SYSTEM.
             FIELD NOTES   – The official written record of the survey, certified by the field surveyor and approved by proper
               authority. Originally, Field Notes were prepared by hand, but they are now typewritten. See FIELD TABLETS and
               APPROVED SURVEY.
             FIELD RETURNS    – The field notes, reports and plats submitted for acceptance or approval. See FINAL RETURNS
               and RETURNS.
             FIELD TABLETS   – Notebooks in which the initial information is recorded in the field, and from which the Field
               Notes are transcribed. See FIELD NOTES.
             FIFTH PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN     – The principal meridian governing surveys in Arkansas, Iowa, Minnesota,
               Missouri, North Dakota and South Dakota. It was adopted in 1815.
             FINAL CERTIFICATE    – A document which evidences that an entryman is entitled to a patent provided that no
               irregularities are found in connection with his entry.
             FINAL ENTRY   – Where an application to acquire title to public lands has been filed in the proper manner and all the
               requirements of law and the governing regulations have already been complied with, it is a final entry. Final entries
               may be either cash entries or commuted entries. See CASH ENTRY and COMMUTED HOMESTEAD ENTRY.
               Also see ENTRY and ORIGINAL ENTRY.
             FINAL RETURNS    – In cadastral surveying usage, the field returns are the field notes, reports and plats submitted for
               acceptance or approval. If some error or omission is found, the field work must be corrected or completed. the
               corrected and/or completed field returns are referred to as  “final returns.”  See FIELD RETURNS and RETURNS.
             FIRST FORM RECLAMATION WITHDRAWAL           – A reclamation withdrawal which embraces public lands that
               are or may be needed in connection with the construction and maintenance of a reclamation project. See SECOND
               FORM RECLAMATION WITHDRAWAL.
             FIRST PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN     – Sometimes called  “Ludlow’s Meridian.”  The line surveyed north from the mouth
               of the Great Miami River; it is also the line between Ohio and Indiana. It was adopted in 1819 and governs surveys
                                                                                                         st
               in parts of both Ohio and Indiana. One of six principal meridians named for ordinal numbers, it is abbreviated 1
               Prin Mer. See ORDINAL NUMBER.
             FIVE ACRE TRACT ACT     – See SMALL TRACT ACT.
             FIVE PERCENT RULE    – New area amounts are not usually shown on plats of dependent resurveys. They are shown
               if the area of a vacant subdivision as determined by the dependent resurvey differs from the former area as returned
               on the original approved plat by more than two acres per normal legal subdivision, or 5%.
             FIXED BOUNDARY     – An unchangeable boundary created by operation of law. Examples are: 1) a standard parallel
               or other control line becomes a fixed boundary on return of areas in adjacent quarter sections. 2) A median line of a
               nonnavigable stream becomes a fixed boundary after an avulsive change. 3) Meander lines can become fixed
               boundaries when omitted lands have been created by gross error or fraud in the original survey.
             FLAGMAN   – A member of a survey party who gives sights to or takes line from the instrument man and flags distant
               points along the survey line. Also called  “point setter.”
             FLORIDA PURCHASE     – The second addition of territory originally claimed by a European power to the territory of
               the United States. It was ceded by Spain in 1819 under a treaty which settled conflicts with Spain in West Florida
               and defined the boundary between the United States and the Spanish possessions in the Southwest.
             FOLLOWING THE FOOTSTEPS OF THE ORIGINAL SURVEYOR             – Retracement of survey lines using field
               and survey record evidence to determine the direction and distances measured by the surveyor who created the
               boundary. The process usually requires remeasurement of topographic calls, search for evidence of the previous
               survey work, determination of consistent of inconsistent chaining or bearing error in the original survey, and
               consideration of various conditions at the time the survey was executed as well as the methods and equipment used
               by the surveyor to be followed.
             FORESHORE    – 1) (Shalowitz) According to riparian law, the strip of land between the high and low water marks that
               is alternately covered and uncovered by the flow of the tide. 2) (T.R. No. 4) The part of the shore, lying between the
               crest of the seaward berm (or upper limit of wave action at high tide) and the ordinary low water mark, that is
               ordinarily traversed by the uprush and backrush of the waves as the tides rise and fall. See BEACH, SHORE,
               BACKSHORE and TIDELANDS.
             FORESIGHT   – 1) A sight on a new survey point made in connection with its determination. 2) a distant object
               intersected by a straight survey line used for checking alinement. See  FORESIGHT*.
             FOREWORD AZIMUTH       – See GEODETIC AZIMUTH.
             FOUND CORNER     – An existent corner of the public land surveys which has been recovered by field investigation.
             FOURTH PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN       – The part of this principal meridian which was adopted in 1815 governs
               surveys in part of Illinois. It was extended and the portion which was adopted in 1831 governs surveys in Wisconsin
                                                th
               and part of Minnesota. It is abbreviated 4  Prin Mer.
             FRACTIONAL SECTION     – A section, which in its original form, contained one or more subdivisions of less than
               forty (40) acres due to irregular exterior boundaries, or due to the encroachment of a meandered body of water or
               other land which could not properly be surveyed or disposed of as an aliquot part of that section.
             FRACTIONAL TOWNSHIP      – A township containing less than 36 normal sections, usually because of invasion by a
               segregated body of water, or by other land which cannot properly be surveyed as part of that township or by closing

               the public-land surveys on State boundaries or other limiting lines. Half ranges and half townships are fractional
               townships by definition.
             FRAGMENTARY SURVEYS       – Surveys required to identify parts of townships and sections not completed in original
               surveys. This may include partially surveyed sections, omitted public land islands and other lands of substantial
               value and extent that for various reasons were not included in the original surveys. Surveys of this type frequently
               require consideration of the question of title prior to the extension of the former surveys.
             FREE AND CLEAR    – The title to property is said to be  “free and clear”  when it is not encumbered by any lien; but it
               is said that agreement to convey land  “free and clear”  is satisfied by a conveyance passing a title.
             FRONTING   – Usually signifies abutting, adjoining, or bordering on, depending on the context. Land abutting on a
               highway, river, seashore or the like. The land extending along a road, street, river, canal or ocean. The term, as used
               in statutes relating to assessments for improvements, indicates that there is no intervening land. See ABUT and
               ADJOINING.

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E Terms in Land Surveying

E Terms

             E (Land Status Records)  – East.
             EC STATION   – 1) Extended control station*. 2) Electronic control station.
             EDM  – Electronic Distance Measurement.
             EDP  – Electronic Data Processing.
             EFF (Land Status Records)  – Effective.
             E.G.  – An abbreviation of  “exampli gratia,”  which means: For the sake of an example.
             EHE (Land Status Records)  – Enlarged homestead entry.
             ELIM (Land Status Records)  – Elimination.
             ENLGMT (Land Status Records)  – Enlargement.
             EO (Land Status Records ) – Executive Order.
             ES (Land Status Records)  – Exchange survey.
             ESLO  – Eastern States Land Office. The Eastern States Land Office is in Silver Springs, Maryland. (Now designated
               Eastern States Office, ESO).
             ESMT (Land Status Records)  – Easement.
             ET AL  – An abbreviation of et alii,  “and others,”  or et alius,  “and another.”
             ETC.  – The common abbreviation for  “et cetera.”  And others; and other things; and others of like character; and others
               of like kind; and the rest; and so on; and so forth.
             ET CON.  – An abbreviation meaning  “and husband.”
             ET SEQ.  – An abbreviation for et sequentes or et sequentia,  “and the following.”  A reference to  p. 3 et seq.”   means
               “page number 3 and the following pages.”  It is also abbreviated  “et sqq.,”  in some works, when the reference is to
               more than one following page.
             ET UX.  – An abbreviation for et uxor,  “and his wife.”
             EXCL (Land Status Records)  – Excluding, excluded.
             EXP (Land Status Records)  – Expire(d).
             EX REL  – (See word listing below).
             EXT (Land Status Records)  – Extended, extension, extend.
             EASEMENT    – An interest or right in land owned by another that entitles its holder to a specific limited use; such as
               laying a sewer, crossing over property or putting up power lines.
             EGRESS  – A right to go upon the land of another. Often used interchangeably with the word  “access.”   See ACCESS,
               INGRESS, ENGRESS and REGRESS.
             ELDER SURVEY    – See SURVEY, ELDER.
             ELECTRONIC CONTROL SURVEY        – A survey, using theodolites and electronic equipment, whereby a control
               network is established and monumented to facilitate the placement of the rectangular survey grid. See
               ELECTRONIC DISTANCE MEASUREMENT*.
             ELLICOTT’S LINE   – The meridian northward from the point of beginning of the first United States cadastral survey
               – a point established on August 20, 1785 on the north bank of the Ohio River – was named for Andrew Ellicott, and
               is known as Ellicott’s Line. It is also the Ohio-Pennsylvania boundary line.
                            Florida as determined by the treaty dated Oct. 27, 1795. This boundary along the 31  parallel of north latitude is
               called Ellicott’s Line of Demarcation.
             ELONGATED SECTION      – A section which exceeds 85 chains in either length or width as originally surveyed and
               platted.
             EMINENT DOMAIN     – The right of governmental agencies to take private property for public use.
             ENABLING ACT   – In reference to admission of new States into the Union, it is an act passed by Congress
               empowering the people of a territory to frame a constitution and lay down certain requirements that must be met
               prerequisite to statehood.
             ENCROACHMENT      – An unlawful and adverse intrusion within the boundary of a property, such as cultivation of the
               soil, enclosure by fence, the construction of an improvement, extension of a tunnel, underground operation or
               comparable act.
             ENCUMBRANCE      – Any right to or interest in land which makes it subject to a charge or liability. Encumbrances
               include mortgages, judgment liens, attachments, leases, deed restrictions, unpaid taxes, inchoate rights of dower and
               so forth. See INCHOATE.
             END LINE  – In mining law, the end lines of a claim, as platted or laid down on the ground, are those which mark its
               boundaries on the shorter dimension, where it crosses the vein. If the claim as a whole crosses the vein, instead of
               following its course, the end lines are still the boundaries of the shorter dimension, even though they are along the
               course of the vein. See SIDE LINE.
             ENLARGED HOMESTEAD ENTRY         – A homestead entry, not exceeding 320 acres, initiated under the act of Feb.
               19, 1909 (35 Stat. 639), or the act of June 17, 1910 (36 stat. 531, 43 U.S.C. sec. 218), which provide for the
               homesteading of nonirrigable agricultural lands in the West..
             ENTRY   – An application to acquire title to public lands. See ORIGINAL ENTRY, FINAL ENTRY, CASH ENTRY,
               and COMMUTED HOMESTEAD ENTRY.
             ENTRY ALLOWED     – An application to acquire title to public lands which has been approved, either as an original
               entry or a final entry. See ORIGINAL ENTRY and FINAL ENTRY.
             ENTRYMAN    – One who makes an entry of land under the public land laws of the United States.
             ENTRY UNPERFECTED      – An original entry which has been allowed, but under which the entryman has not met all
               the requirements of the law and/or regulations to permit him to make final entry for patent to the land. See FINAL
               ENTRY.
             EPHEMERIS    – Any tabular statement of the assigned places of a celestial body for regular intervals. The current
               Ephemeris of the Sun, Polaris and Other Selected Stars with Companion Data and Tables, which has been published
               annually in advance since 1910 as a supplement to the various Manuals of Surveying Instructions, is available
               through the U.S. Government Printing Office in Washington, D.C.
             EQUATION   – The relationship between two stationing values for the same point in route surveying such as 123 + 45.6
               back = 124 + 00 ahead.
             EQUITABLE   – 1) Just; conformable to the principles of right and justice. Just, fair and right in consideration of the
               facts and circumstances of an individual case. 2) Existing, available or sustainable only in equity or by the rules and
               principles of equity. See EQUITY.
             EQUITY  – A system of law originating in the English chancery and comprising a settled and formal body of legal and
               procedural rules and doctrines that supplement, aid or override common and statute law. Rules of equity are
               designed to protect rights and enforce duties as created and defined by law. In another legal meaning,  “equity”  is the
               remaining interest belonging to one who has pledged or mortgaged his property, or the surplus of value which may
               remain after the property has been sold to satisfy liens. The amount of value of a property above the total liens or
               charges. See COURTS OF EQUITY.
             EROSION   – In riparian law, the washing away of land by the sea or a river’s flow. Usually considered as an
               imperceptible action, the rate of erosion may be quite rapid in total effect and may be distinguished from avulsion by
               the absence of identifiable upland between former and new channels. See RIPARIAN LAW.
             ERRONEOUS LOCATION       – Where it is evident that lands have been occupied in good faith but boundaries as
               occupied are clearly in disagreement with the demonstrated position of the legal subdivision called for in the
               description, it is regarded as a case of  “erroneous location.”  See AMENDED ENTRY.
             ERRONEOUSLY OMITTED AREAS        – See OMITTED LANDS.
             ERRONEOUS MEANDERS       – Error or mistake in position rather than in procedure. See MEANDERS.
             ESCHEAT   – In English feudal law, the reversion of lands to the lord of the fee in consequence of a want of an
               individual competent to inherit. In modern law, the State is deemed to occupy the place and hold the rights of the
               feudal lord. Real property may be claimed by the State where there is no will and/or no competent inheritors can be
               found. Also termed  “escheated property”  or  “escheatage.”  See INTESTATE.
             ESCROW   – The state or condition of a deed which is conditionally held by a third person, or the possession and
               retention of a deed by a third person pending performance of a condition. While in the possession of the third
               person, and subject to condition, it is called an  “escrow.”
             ESTATE  – The interest which anyone has in lands or in any other property.  “Estate:  is used in conveyances in
               connection with the words  “right,” “title”  and  “interest.”  It is, in a great degree, synonymous with all of them. See
               CONVEYANCE, REAL ESTATE, PROPERTY, REAL PROPERTY and PERSONAL PROPERTY.
             ESTOPPEL   – The stopping of a person from asserting a claim by reason of his own previous representations which
               refute his new claim. The new claim may in fact be true, however, he may be prevented from exerting that claim by
               “estoppel.”  See RES JUDICATA.
             EVIDENCE   – Testimony, physical objects, marks, traces of former objects or relationship between any of these which
               may furnish proof or part of a proof of a corner location or line location. See COLLATERAL EVIDENCE.
             EVIDENCING OF TITLE    – The submission of proof of title to a tract of land as shown by an abstract of the recorded
               patent and deeds of transfer, inheritance, court decree, or other means of establishing the title.
             EXCEPTION   – In deeds or conveyances, a clause used by the grantor to retain some part of the former estate by
               excluding it from the deed or grant.  “Except”  means  “not including.”
             EXCHANGE    – A transaction whereby the Federal Government receives land in exchange for other land and/or timber.
               See PRIVATE EXCHANGE, STATE EXCHANGE and TAYLOR ACT EXCHANGE.
             EXCHANGE SURVEY      – A Cadastral Survey of lands to be exchanged.
             EXISTENT CORNER     – A corner whose position can be identified by verifying the evidence of the monument, or its
               accessories, by reference to the description that is contained in the field notes, or where the point can be located by
               an acceptable supplemental survey record, some physical evidence or testimony.
             EX OFFICIO  – From office; powers exercised by an official not specifically conferred on him but necessarily implied
               in his office.
             EXPERT WITNESS    – A witness is a person who testifies as to what he has observed by sight, sound etc. An  “expert
               witness”  may testify additionally as to matters of opinion on subjects within fields for which he is qualified. Thus, a
               cadastral surveyor may interpret the meanings of the symbols, letters and numbers on a plat but he may say nothing
               to add to or subtract from the official record, which speaks for itself by definition. See EVIDENCE, TESTIMONY,
               QUALIFIED (as a witness).
             EX REL  – Ex Relatione; Upon relation or information. Legal proceedings which are instituted by the Attorney General
               (or other proper person) in the name and behalf of the State, but on the information and at the instigation of an
               individual who has a private interest in the matter, are said to be taken  “on the relation”  (ex relatione) of such
               person, who is called the  “relator.”  Such cause is usually entitled thus:  “State ex rel. Doe v. Roe.”
             EXTENSION SURVEY     – Executed to add to an existing survey. An  “extension survey”  does not, however, complete
               a survey of boundaries of townships or sections or the subdivision of a township or a section, it only adds to an
               existing partial survey. See COMPLETION SURVEY.
             EXTINGUISHMENT     – To render legally nonexistent; to destroy or render void; to nullify; to void, as by payment,
               treaty, setoff, or limitation of actions, merger of an interest in a great one, etc. Extinguishment is distinguished from
               the mere transfer, passing, or suspension of a right or obligation.
             EXTRALATERAL RIGHTS      – In mining, the right to mine ore downward along a lode or vein beyond the side lines
               of a mining location (claim). The right is limited to claims which contain the apex of the vein at or very near the
               surface, which are oriented with the lode line substantially along the vein and which have the end lines substantially
               parallel. The right does not extend beyond planes passing vertically through the end lines. Extralateral rights of
               claims filed before May 10, 1872, were determined according to the previous law of 1866 and by miner’s local rules
               and they were not dependent upon parallel end lines. Various States have modified the Federal requirements. See
               INTRALIMITAL RIGHTS.

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D Terms in Land Surveying

D Terms

             D (Land Status Records)  – Director.
             DC  – District of Columbia.
             DC (Land Status Records)  – Donation claim. See DONATION LAND CLAIM.
             D/C (Land Status Records)  – Ditches and/or Canal.
             DDB  – Directives Digest Bulletin.
             DE  – Delaware. See Delaware Land Surveyors             DED (Land Status Records)  – Dedication.
             DEF (Land Status Records)  – Deficiency.
             DEP  – Department (of a traverse).
             DEPT OF AGRI (Land Status Records)  – Department of Agriculture.
             DEPT OF INT (Land Status Records ) – Department of the Interior.
             DES (Land Status Records)  – Designated or Designation.
             DET (Land Status Records)  – Determination.
             DI-10  – A brand name of electronic measurement equipment.
             DLC  – Donation land Claim.
             DLE (Land Status Records)  – Desert Land Entry.
             DM (Land Status Records)  – District Manager.
             DMD  – Double meridian distance.
             DOC (Land Status Records)  – Document.
             DPD  – Double parallel distance.
             DSC  – Denver Service Center.
             DANGER ZONE    – In regard to the rectangular limits of township boundaries, the  “danger zone”   is placed at
               theoretical bearings exceeding 14 minutes of arc from cardinal. In respect to lengths of lines, the  “danger zone”
               occurs when adjustments exceed 33 links per mile, as defined in Manual of Surveying Instructions.
             DATUM   – In ordinary survey usage, a defined reference for survey measurements. The plural form is datums. See
               GEODETIC DATUM, TIDAL DATUM, NORTH AMERICAN DATUM OF 1927*, MEAN SEA LEVEL, LEVEL
               DATUM*.
             DECISION  – a decision is the reduction to writing of the adjudicative process. A decision orders the disposition of a
               case in a certain way, and contains a statement of the facts, laws and reasoning which require that disposition.
             DECLINATION    – An angle of difference. See ASTRONOMIC DECLINATION, MAGNETIC DECLINATION,
               VARIATION.
             DECLINATION, ASTRONOMIC       – The angular distance of a celestial body north or south of the celestial equator.
               Astronomic declination on the celestial sphere corresponds with latitude on the earth. It is noted as positive (+) when
               north and negative (-) when south of the celestial equator.
             DEED  – A document which transfers title to real property. In those instances where a complicated metes and bounds
               description is the only description available, a deed may be used to transfer fee simple interest in public lands. A
               patent would be issued under normal conditions where a cadastral survey plat shows a description by legal
               subdivisions. See PATENT, WARRANTY, BARGAIN AND SALE, QUITCLAIM DEED, and DESCRIPTION
               BY LEGAL SUBDIVISIONS.
             DEFENDANT   – The person defending or denying; the party against whom relief or recovery is sought in an action or
               suit. See PLAINTIFF.
             DEFICIENCY   – The amount by which a boundary is less than the nominal amount which is usually 80 chains.
             DEFLECTION ANGLE     – The angular difference from a straight line at an angle point in a traverse.
             DE MINIMIS NON CURAT LEX      – The law does not care for, or take notice of, very small or trifling matters; the law
               does not concern itself about trifles. a surveyor’s return of 29 inches length for a location monument should be
               considered a trifling difference. See also RULE OF APPROXIMATION.
             DEMUR   – To take exception. To make an objection. To present a demurrer. See DEMURRER.
             DEMURRER    – An answer to a legal action that assumes the truth of the matter alleged by the opposite party. It then
               sets up the defense that the complaint is insufficient in law to sustain his claim or that there is some other defect
               constituting a legal reason why the opposing party should not be allowed to proceed further. Also, one who demurs.
             DEPARTURE*.
             DEPENDENT RESURVEY      – A retracement and reestablishment of the lines of the original survey in their true
               original positions according to the best available evidence of the positions of the original corners. It includes the
               restoration of lost corners in accordance with procedures described in the Manual of Surveying Instructions. See
               RESURVEY, INDEPENDENT RESURVEY, RETRACEMENT, and RESTORATION.
             DEPOSIT  – In mining, a quantity of mineral substances occurring naturally in the earth; as, a deposit of gold, oil, etc.
             DEPOSIT SURVEY    – A cadastral survey made under certain public land laws which allow or require that the claimant
               make a deposit of money in the estimated amount of the cost of the survey.
             DEPOSITION   – The testimony of a witness taken under oath and reduced to writing, authenticated, and intended to be
               used upon the trial of an action in court. A written declaration under oath, made upon notice to the adverse party for
               the purpose on enabling him to attend and cross-examine; or upon written interrogatories. It is the giving of notice to
               the adverse party which especially distinguishes a deposition from an affidavit. See AFFIDAVIT,
               INTERROGATORIES.
             DEPUTY SURVEYOR     – A surveyor who entered into a contract to survey a portion of the public lands under the
               system in existence prior to 1910 was commissioned by the Surveyor General as his deputy. See CONTRACT
               SYSTEM.
             DERELICTION    – Same as Reliction.
             DESCRIPTION   – See CORNER DESCRIPTION, LEGAL DESCRIPTION.
             DESCRIPTION BY LEGAL SUBDIVISION       – Definition of a unit or units of land with reference to the rectangular the
               system; for example, Lot 3 and SE �  NW � sec. 6, T. 8 N., R. 20 W., 5  Prin. Mer., Arkansas.
             DESERT-LAND APPLICATION, STATE       – An application filed by a State for a grant of desert land for the purpose
               of disposal to bona fide settlers. See CAREY ACTS.
             DESERT LAND ENTRY     – An entry of irrigable arid agricultural public lands, under the terms of the Act of March 3,
               1877, as amended, for the purpose of reclamation, irrigation and cultivation in part.
             DESERT-LAND SEGREGATION, STATE        – Arid public lands which have been selected by a State under the Carey
               Acts and which are set aside pending completion under State direction of an irrigation system to reclaim the lands.
             DIAGRAM, TOWNSHIP OR SECTION        – A standardized drawing of a township or of a section which shows the
               major legal subdivisions.
             DICTA  – Opinions of a judge which are beside the point of a case at issue before the court. See OBITER DICTUM.
             DICTUM   – A remark by the way. Generally, the word  “dictum”  is used as an abbreviated form of  “Obiter dictum.”
               See OBITER DICTUM.
             DIKE  – 1) (noun) An embankment or barrier constructed to hold water out of a low-lying area, or to hold water within
               an area. 2) (verb) To surround, protect, or enclose with such an embankment. 3) (in geology) A sheet like intrusion
               of magma forced upward through fissures in the earth’s crust and hardened to a tabular mass of igneous rock. A
               volcanic dike may vary from a few inches to hundreds of feet in horizontal thickness. See LEVEE, GROIN.
             DIRECT  – 1) a transit observation on the sun used for computing bearing as opposed to use of the solar instrument. 2)
               The normal position of the transit’s telescope. See DIRECT TIE, DIRECT MEASUREMENT, DIRECT ANGLES*.
             DIRECT MEASUREMENT       – Determination of a distance by physical comparison or accumulation of distance using
               a device calibrated in some unit of measure. See INDIRECT MEASUREMENT.
             DIRECT TIE  – A connection to another survey point by physical measurement. See DIRECT MEASUREMENT.
             DIRECTOR   – The present title of the official who is head of the Bureau of Land Management. Functions formerly
               assigned to the Commissioner of the General Land Office and to the Director of the Grazing Service are a part of
               this official’s responsibility.
             DIRECT SYSTEM    – The Interior Department appropriation Act of 1911 (June 25, 1910, 36 Stat. 703, 740), provided,
               under  “Surveying the Public Lands”; “The surveys and resurveys to be made by such competent surveyors as the
               Secretary of the Interior may select, …”  This provision ended the practice of letting contracts for the surveys of the
               public lands, and required the  “direct”  hiring of a permanent corps of cadastral surveyors. See CONTRACT
               SYSTEM.
             DIRTY SHEET   – A slang term for a sketch showing the current progress and details of the field work of a cadastral
               survey.
             DISCOVERY    – In mining law, as the basis of the right to locate a mining claim upon the public domain, discovery
               means the finding of mineralized rock in place. Also, the physical exposure of the mineral vein or lode or other
               mineral deposit on the ground. See VEIN, DISCOVERY, and POINT OF DISCOVERY.
             DISPOSAL, LAND   – A transaction which leads to the transfer of title to public lands from the Federal Government.
             DISPOSITION   – A transaction which leads to the transfer of public lands, and/or resources in these lands from the
               Federal Government.
             DISTANCE, PARENTHETICAL      – See PARENTHETICAL DISTANCE.
             DISTORTION   – A greater than usual change in bearings and distances of the original survey which is reflected by a
               retracement or resurvey.
             DISTRICT (BLM)   – The primary administrative division of a State Director’s geographic area of responsibility. A
               geographic area composed of at least two (typically three or four) resource areas under the supervision of a District
               Manager. See DISTRICT MANAGER AND RESOURCE AREA.
             DISTRICT MANAGER (BLM)      – The principal Bureau official at the district level. He is directly accountable to the
               State Director. See STATE DIRECTOR.
             DISTRICT OFFICES (BLM)    – The States and cities in which BLM district offices are currently (1973) located are as
               follows:
             Alaska – Anchorage and Fairbanks.
             Arizona – Phoenix and Safford.
             California – Bakersfield, Folsom, Redding, Riverside, Susanville and Ukiah.
             Colorado – Canon City, Craig, Glenwood Springs, Grand Junction and Montrose.
             Idaho – Boise, Burley, Coeur d’Alene, Idaho Falls, Salmon and Shoshone.
             Montana – Billings, Dillon, Lewiston, Malta, Miles City and Missoula.
             Nevada – Battle Mountain, Carson City, Elko, Ely, Las Vegas and Winnemucca.
             New Mexico – Albuquerque, Las Cruces, Roswell and Socorro.
             Oregon – Baker, Burns, Coos Bay, Eugene, Lakeview, Medford, Prineville, Roseburg, Salem and Vale.
             Utah – Cedar City, Fillmore, Kanab, Monticello, Price, Richfield, St. George, Salt Lake City and Vernal.
             Washington – Spokane (Administered through Oregon State Office).
             Wyoming – Casper, Lander, Pinedale, Rawlins, Rock Springs and Worland.
             See SPECIAL OFFICES (BLM), STATE OFFICES (BLM), LAND OFFICES (BLM), DISTRICT (BLM), DISTRICT
               MANAGER (BLM).
             DITCHES AND/OR CANALS      – Used to indicate a reservation to the United States of a right, or an easement for the
               construction and maintenance of ditches or canals, as stated in a particular patent.
             DIURNAL   – Daily. Usually used in reference to a natural phenomenon which occurs only once in a given day.
             DIVEST  – To deprive; take away or withdraw. Usually spoken of in reference to depriving or dispossessing one of
               property, title or authority.
             DIVIDE  – A ridge or area of elevated land between two basins or valleys. See CONTINENTAL DIVIDE,
               HYDROGRAPHIC DIVIDE and RIDGE TOP.
             DIVISION LINE BETWEEN A BOG AND AN UPLAND AREA          – The line where the area occupied by a shallow,
               virtually undrained bog area meets mineral soil, which lies above ordinary high water. If upland vegetation is
               present, the inference will be that it has been an upland site for the period equal to the age of the vegetation. See
    &nbnbsp;          BOG and UPLANDS.
             DIVISION LINE BETWEENA MEANDERABLE BODY OF WATER AND A SWAMP– The line where the
               area occupied by the water for the greater part of each average year meets the area where the types of vegetation
               occur which may normally be found only within the swamp zone. For example, while certain varieties of trees are
               found only in upland situation, other varieties and other types of vegetation may be found only within the zone of
               the swamp. All such vegetation normally ends at the margin of permanent water. See SWAMP.
             DIVISION LINE BETWEEN A SWAMP AND AN UPLAND AREA           – The line where an area lying above the
               ordinary high water elevation meets an area of low, wet land of such character that without the construction of
               artificial reclamation methods it would be wet and unfit for agriculture. See SWAMP, MARSH, BOG, SALT
               MARSH, SWAMP AND OVERFLOWED LANDS, and UPLANDS.
             DOCUMENT    – 1) An instrument on which is recorded, by means of letters, figures, marks or symbols, information
               which may be relied upon as the basis, proof or support of something. A deed, agreement, title paper, letter or other
               written instrument used to prove a fact. 2) To furnish written evidence. To provide with factual or substantial
               support for statements made or a hypothesis proposed; especially, to equip with exact references too authoritative
               supporting information.
             DOMESDAY-BOOK (Sometimes Doomsday-Book)      – A record of a survey of English lands made by order of
               William the Conqueror. It was begun in 1081 and finished in 1086. It is a description of the land, with the names of
               the owners, and the nature and extent of their holdings. It was, in effect, a cadastral survey.
             DONATION    – The voluntary conveyance of private property to public ownership and/or use, without compensation to
               the owner.
             DONATION ACT OF SEPTEMBER 27, 1850      – Provided for grants of 320 acres to all White American citizens or
               those who intended to become citizens and who had resided in Oregon Territory and cultivated the land 4 years;
               wives to have an additional 320 acres. All white male citizens or intended citizens who emigrated there between
               Dec. 1, 1850 & Dec. 1, 1853, and who met the other requirements, were to have 160 acres or 320 acres, depending
               on their marital status. See DONATION LAND CLAIM.
             DONATION LAND CLAIM      – The land, 320 or 640 acres, that was allocated to an Oregon settler under the Donation
               Act of September 27, 1850. See DONATION ACT OF SEPTEMBER 27, 1850, ACT OF AUGUST 4, 1842, ACT
               OF JULY 22, 1854, and DONATION LANDS.
             DONATION LANDS     – Lands granted from the public domain to an individual or, as in the case of lands donated or
               granted to railroads as an incentive for construction, to corporations. See also DONATION.
             DOUBLE CENTERING*.
             DOUBLE CORNER     – Normally the two sets of corners along a standard parallel; the standard township, section, and
               quarter-section corners placed at regular intervals of measurement; additionally, the closing corners established on
               the line at the points of intersection of the guide meridians, range and section lines of the surveys brought in from
               the south. In other cases, not fully in conformity with the rectangular plan, two corners, each common to two
               townships only, instead of one corner of the four townships. Similarly, two corners, each common to two sections;
               and two quarter-section corners, each referring to one section only. The term is sometimes used incorrectly to denote
               two lines established on the ground although the field-note record indicates only one line, thus creating a hiatus or
               overlap.
             DOUBLE MERIDIAN DISTANCE       – 1) The sum of the distances from the end points of a line to an arbitrary
               reference north-south line used for area computations. Sometimes considered as twice the distance from the
               midpoint of a line, which is mathematically equivalent. 2) The method of computing areas using DMDs or DPDs.
             DOUBLE PARALLEL DISTANCE       – The sum of the distances from the end points of a line to an arbitrary east-west
               line used for checking area computations by the DMD method.
             DOUBLE PROPORTIONATE MEASUREMENT (Also called “4-Way” proportion)        – A method of restoring a
               lost corner of four townships or four interior sections. It gives concordant relation between all parts of the times. The
               new values given to the several parts, as determined by remeasurement shall bear the same relation to the record
               lengths as the new measurement of the whole line bears to that record. In cases of distorted lines subject to double
               proportion, measurements are comparable only when reduced to their equivalent latitudes and departures. See
               SINGLE PROPORTIONATE MEASUREMENT and PROPORTIONATE MEASUREMENT.
             DOWER   – The portion of, or interest in, the real estate of a deceased husband which the law gives to his widow for
               life. The extent varies with statutory provisions. See CURTESY.
             DRAINAGE ENTRY     – An entry, not exceeding 160 acres, on public lands. Under Federal statutory authority, a non-
               Federal tax, or drainage charge, is levied against such lands to defray the costs of draining swamp and overflowed
               lands. Also Drainage Homestead Entry.
             DRIFT  – In mining, an underground passage driven horizontally along the course of a mineralized vein or
               approximately so. See SHAFT, TUNNEL, ADIT, CROSSCUT, DRIFT*.
             DUE  – Directly or exactly; in a cardinal direction with the usual precision of that survey.

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