Elements of Surveying: With a Description of the Instruments and the Necessary Tables, Including a Table of Natural Sines |
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Page 6
... Meridian Distances of the Courses , 102 Of the Area , 104 First Method of Plotting , 107 Second Method of Plotting , 107 Method of finding the Content of Land by means of the Table of Natural Sines , 120 Method of Surveying the Public ...
... Meridian Distances of the Courses , 102 Of the Area , 104 First Method of Plotting , 107 Second Method of Plotting , 107 Method of finding the Content of Land by means of the Table of Natural Sines , 120 Method of Surveying the Public ...
Page 92
... meridian . In the interior of the compass - box , there is a graduated circle divided to degrees , and sometimes to half degrees : the degrees are numbered from the extremities of the diameter NS , both ways to 90 ° . The length of the ...
... meridian . In the interior of the compass - box , there is a graduated circle divided to degrees , and sometimes to half degrees : the degrees are numbered from the extremities of the diameter NS , both ways to 90 ° . The length of the ...
Page 93
... meridian . Although this line is different from the true meridian , yet in the sur- veys made with the compass , we shall take for the meridian that line which is determined by the direction of the mag- netic needle . 124. If the right ...
... meridian . Although this line is different from the true meridian , yet in the sur- veys made with the compass , we shall take for the meridian that line which is determined by the direction of the mag- netic needle . 124. If the right ...
Page 94
... meridian passing through the point of beginning . S Thus , in running the course AB , CB is the departure , east . 130. It will be found convenient , in explaining the rules for surveying with the compass , to attribute to the latitudes ...
... meridian passing through the point of beginning . S Thus , in running the course AB , CB is the departure , east . 130. It will be found convenient , in explaining the rules for surveying with the compass , to attribute to the latitudes ...
Page 95
... meridian distance of a point is the perpendicular let fall on the meridian , from which the distance is estimated This meridian is called the assumed meridian . Thus , if the distance be estimated from NS , BC will be the meridian ...
... meridian distance of a point is the perpendicular let fall on the meridian , from which the distance is estimated This meridian is called the assumed meridian . Thus , if the distance be estimated from NS , BC will be the meridian ...
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Common terms and phrases
adjusted angle of elevation axis azimuth back-sights base line called centre clamp-screw coincide column comp compass Cosine D Cosine Sine Cotang course curve decimal degrees determined difference of level direction divided double meridian distance draw east elongation error example feet field notes figure given angle given line given point ground Gunter's chain hence horizontal angle horizontal distance horizontal plane hypothenuse inches instrument intersection LatDegDegDegDeg Distance latitude and departure length line AC line of collimation logarithm M.
M. Sine marked measure multiplied natural sines object opposite station paper parallel passing perpendicular plane of reference protractor radius right angles right-angled triangle rods scale of equal secant side sights similar triangles Sine Sine spider's lines square chains staff subtract surface survey Tang tangent theodolite true meridian vernier plate vertical limb yards
Popular passages
Page 12 - FRACTION is a negative number, and is one more than the number of ciphers between the decimal point and the first significant Jigure.
Page 41 - In any triangle, the sum of the two sides containing either angle, is to their difference, as the tangent of half the sum of the two other angles, to the tangent of half their difference.
Page 73 - Being on a horizontal plane, and wanting to ascertain the height of a tower, standing on the top of an inaccessible hill, there were measured, the angle of elevation of the top of the hill 40°, and of the top of the tower 51° ; then measuring in a direct line 180 feet farther from the hill, the angle of elevation of the top of the tower Cway 33° 45' ; required the height of the tower.
Page 113 - B, from B to C, from C to D, from D to E, and from E to A ; and measure the distances AB, BC, CD, DE, and E.1.
Page 19 - ... perimeter of the polygon. 14. The polygon of three sides, the simplest of all, is called a triangle; that of four sides, a quadrilateral; that of...
Page 34 - The circumference of every circle is supposed to be divided into 360 equal parts, called degrees ; each degree into 60 equal parts, called minutes ; and each minute into 60 equal parts, called seconds.
Page 21 - If equals be added to equals, the wholes will be equal. 3. If equals be taken, from equals, the remainders will be equal. 4. If equals be added to unequals, the wholes will be unequal.
Page 20 - And lastly, the trapezoid, only two of whose sides are parallel. 18. A diagonal is a line which joins the vertices of two angles not adjacent to each other. Thus, AF, AE, AD, AC, are diagonals.
Page 11 - The minutes in the left-hand column of each page, increasing downwards, belong to the degrees at the top ; and those increasing upwards, in the right.hand column, belong to the degrees below.
Page 35 - The secant of an arc is the line drawn from the centre of the circle through one extremity of the arc, and limited by the tangent passing through the other extremity. Thus, OC is the secant of the arc AB.