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World History and
Geography |
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Glossary of
Cartographic/Map Terms
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Definitions Provided By: Maps for
America. Third Edition |
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- accuracy
- Degree of conformity with a standard. Accuracy relates to
the quality of a result and is distinguished from precision
which relates to the quality of the operation by which the
result is obtained.
- adjustment
- Process designed to remove inconsistencies in measured or
computed quantities by applying derived corrections to
compensate for random or accidental errors.
- adjustment, land- line
- Positioning land lines on a map to indicate their true,
theoretical, or approximate location relative to the
adjacent terrain and culture, by reconciling the information
shown on Bureau of Land Management plats and field records
with the ground evidence of the location of the lines.
- adjustment, standard accuracy
- Adjustment of a survey resulting in values for positions
and (or) elevations that comply with the National Map
Accuracy Standards.
- aerotriangulation
- The process of developing a network of horizontal and or
vertical positions from a group of known positions using
direct or indirect measurements from aerial photographs and
mathematical computations.
- alidade
- Instrument, or part of an instrument , for determining
direction , either horizontal or vertical . In its simplest
form, a peepsight or telescope mounted on a straightedge and
used for plotting directions graphically. In such
instruments as transits and theodolites, the alidade is the
part containing the telescope and its attachments.
- altimeter
- Instrument for measuring altitudes or elevations with
respect to a reference level, usually mean sea level. The
most common type is an aneroid barometer. A radar altimeter
determines the height of an aircraft above the terrain by
measuring the time required for an electromagnetic pulse to
travel from aircraft to the ground and back.
- azimuth
- Horizontal direction reckoned clockwise from the meridian
plane.
- backshore
- Part of a beach that is usually dry and is reached only by
the highest tides; by extension, a narrow strip of
relatively flat coast bordering the sea.
- base map
- See: map, base.
- bathymetric map
- See: map, bathymetric
- bathymetry
- Science of measuring water depths (usually in the ocean)
to determine bottom topography.
- beach (seabeach)
- Zone of unconsolidated material that extends landward from
the low water line to the place where there is marked change
in material or physiographic form, or to the line of
permanent vegetation (usually the effective lint of storm
waves).
- bench mark
- Relatively permanent material object, natural or
artificial, bearing a marked point whose elevation above or
below an adopted datum is known.
- boundary monument
- Material object placed on or near a boundary line to
preserve and identify the location of the boundary line on
the ground
- boundary survey
- Survey made to establish or to reestablish a boundary line
on the ground, or to obtain data for constructing a map or
plat showing a boundary line.
- cadastral map
- See: map, cadastral.
- cadastral survey
- Survey relating to land boundaries, made to create units
suitable for title transfer or to define the limitations of
title. Derived from "cadastre" meaning a register
of land quantities, values, and ownership used levying
taxes, the term may properly be applied to surveys of a
similar nature outside the public lands, such surveys are
more commonly called "land surveys" or
"property surveys."
- cartography
- Science and art of making maps and charts. The term may be
taken broadly as comprising all the steps needed to produce
a map: planning, aerial photography, field surveys,
photogrammetry, editing, color separation, and multicolor
printing. Mapmakers, however, tend to limit use of the term
to the map-finishing operations, in which the master
manuscript is edited and color separation plates are
prepared for lithographic printing.
- chain
- Unit of length equal to 66 feet, used especially in the
U.S. public land surveys. The original measuring instrument
(Gunter's chain) was literally a chain consisting of 100
iron links, each 7.92 inches long. Steel-ribbon tapes began
to supersede chains around 1900, but surveying tapes are
often still called "chains" and measuring with a
tape is often called "chaining." The chain is a
convenient unit in cadastral surveys because 10 square
chains equal 1 acre.
- chart
- Special-purpose map designed for navigation or to present
specific data or information. The term "chart" is
applied chiefly to maps made primarily for nautical and
aeronautical navigation, and to maps of the heavens,
although the term is sometimes used to describe other
special-purpose maps.
- chart, aeronautical
- Charts designed to meet requirements of aerial navigating,
produced in several series, each on a specified map
projection and differing in scale, format, and content, for
use as dictated by type of aircraft and whether flight is to
be conducted under visual or instrument flight rules.
- chart, bathymetric
- See: map, bathymetric
- chart, nautical
- Representation of a portion of the navigable waters of the
Earth and adjacent coastal areas on a specified map
projection and designed specifically to meet requirements
for marine navigation. Included on most nautical charts are
depths of water, characteristics of the bottom, elevations
of selected topographic features, general configurations and
characteristics of the coast, the shoreline (usually the
mean high water line), dangers, obstructions and aids to
navigation limited tidal data, and information about
magnetic variation in the charted area.
- choropleth map
- See: map, choropleth
- clinometric map:
- See: map, slope
- color separation
- Process of preparing a separate drawing, engraving, or
negative for each color required in the printing production
of a map or chart.
- compilation
- Preparation of a new or revised map or chart, or portion
thereof, from existing maps, aerial photographs, field
surveys, and other sources.
- continuous tone
- Image not broken into dots by photographic screen;
contains unbroken gradient tones from black to white, and
may be either in negative or positive form. Aerial
photographs are examples of continuous-tone prints.
Contrasted with halftone (screened) and line copy.
- contour
- Imaginary line on ground, all points of which are at the
same elevation above or below a specific datum.
- contour interval
- Difference in elevation between two adjacent contours.
- control mapping
- Points of established position or elevation, or both,
which are used to fix references in positioning and
correlating map features. Fundamental control is provided by
stations in the national networks of triangulation and
traverse (horizontal control) and leveling (vertical
control). Usually it is necessary to extend geodetic
surveys, based on fundamental stations, over the area to be
mapped, to provide a suitable density and distribution of
control points. Supplemental control points are those needed
to relate the aerial photographs used for mapping with the
system of ground control. These points must be positively
photoidentified; that is, the points must be positively
correlated with their images on the photographs.
- control station
- Point on the ground whose position (horizontal or
vertical) is known and can be used as a base for additional
survey work.
- coordinates
- Linear and (or) angular quantities that designate the
position of a point in relation to a given reference frame.
- coordinates, origin of
- Points in a system of coordinates which serves as a zero
point in computing the system's elements or in prescribing
its use.
- culture
- Features constructed by man that are under, on, or above
the ground which are delineated on a map. These include
roads, trails, buildings, canals, sewer systems, and
boundary lines. In a broad sense, the term also applies to
all names, other identification, and legends on a map.
- datum (pl. datums)
- In surveying, a reference system for computing or
correlating the results of surveys. There are tow principal
types of datums: vertical and horizontal. A vertical datum
is a level surface to which heights are referred. In the
United States, the generally adopted vertical datum for
leveling operations is the National Geodetic Vertical Datum
of 1929. The horizontal datum is used as a reference for
position. The North American Datum of 1927 is defined by the
latitude and longitude of an initial point (Meade's Ranch in
Kansas), the direction of a line between this point and a
specified second point, and two dimensions that define the
spheroid. The new North American Datum of 1983 is based on a
newly defined spheroid (GRS80); it is an Earth-centered
datum having no initial point or initial direction.
- datum, national geodetic vertical See: national
geodetic vertical datum of 1929
- declination
- In astronomy, the angular distance of a celestial body
above (north, plus) or below (south, minus) the celestial
Equator. Magnetic declination is the angular difference
between magnetic north and true (geographic) north at the
point of observation; it is not constant but varies with
time because of the "wandering" of the magnetic
north pole.
- depth curve
- Line on a map or chart connecting points of equal depth
below the datum.
- diazo process
- Rapid method for copying documents in which the image is
developed by exposure to ammonia.
- dike
- Bank of earth or stone used to form a barrier, frequently
and confusingly interchanged with levee. A dike restrains
water within an area that normally is flooded. See levee.
- electronic distance measuring (EDM) device:
- Instruments that measure the phase difference between
transmitted and reflected or retransmitted electromagnetic
waves of known frequency, or that measure the round-trip
transit time of a pulsed signal, from which distance is
computed.
- elevation
- Vertical distance of a point above or below a reference
surface or datum.
- ellipsoid
- See: spheroid
- engineering map
- See: map, engineering
- ER-55 plotter
- Double-projection plotting instrument utilizing
ellipsoidal reflectors for light projection.
- erosion
- Group of natural processes including weathering,
dissolution, abrasion, corrosion, and transportation that
remove material from any part of the Earth's surface.
- estuary
- That portion of a stream influenced by the tide of the
body of water into which it flows; an arm of the sea at a
river mouth.
- feature separation
- Process of preparing a separate drawing, engraving, or
negative for selected types of data in the preparation of a
map or chart.
- flood control map
- See: map, flood control
- flood plain
- Belt of low flat ground bordering a stream channel that is
flooded when runoff exceeds the capacity of the stream
channel.
- forestry map
- See: map, forestry
- formlines
- Lines, resembling contour lines, drawn to present a
conception of the shape of the terrain without regard to a
true datum or regular spacing
- geodesy
- Science concerned with the measurement and mathematical
description of the size and shape of the earth and its
gravitational fields. Geodesy also includes the large-scale,
extended surveys for determining positions and elevations of
points, in which the size and shape of the earth must be
taken into account.
- geoid
- Figure of the Earth visualized as a mean sea level surface
extended continuously through the continents. It is a
theoretically continuous surface that is perpendicular at
every point to the direction of gravity (the plumbline).
- geologic map
- See: map, geologic
- graticule
- Network of parallels and meridians on a map or chart.
- graticule, geographic
- System of coordinates of latitude and longitude used to
define the position of a point on the surface of the Earth
with respect to the reference spheroid.
- grid
- Network of uniformly spaced parallel lines intersecting at
right angles. When superimposed on a map, it usually carries
the name of the projection used for the map- that is,
Lambert grid, transverse Mercator grid, universal transverse
Mercator grid.
- hachure
- Any series of lines used on a map to indicate the general
direction and steepness of slopes. The lines are short,
heavy, and close together for steep slopes; longer, lighter,
and more widely spaced for gentle slopes.
- halftone
- A picture in which the gradations of light are obtained by
the relative darkness and density of tiny dots produced by
photographing the subject through a fine screen.
- high water
- Maximum height reached by a rising tide. The height may be
due solely to the periodic tidal forces or it may have
superimposed upon it the effects of prevailing
meteorological conditions. Use of the "high tide"
is discouraged.
- high water line
- Intersection of the land with the water surface at an
elevation of high water.
- high water mark
- Line or mark left upon tidal flats, beach, or along shore
objects indicating the elevation or the intrusion of high
water.
- hydrographic survey
- Survey of water area, with particular reference to
submarine relief, and any adjacent land. See: oceanographic
survey
- hydrography
- Science that deals with the measurement and description of
the physical features of the oceans, seas, lakes, rivers,
and their adjoining coastal areas, with particular reference
to their use for navigation.
- hydrology
- Scientific study of the waters of the Earth, especially
with relation to the effects of precipitation and
evaporation upon the occurrence and character of ground
water.
- hypsographic map
- See: map, hypsographic
- hypsography
- Topography referred to the national geodetic vertical
datum of 1929. The science or art of describing heights of
land surfaces with reference to this datum.
- hypsometric map
- See: map, hypsometric
- hypsometry
- Science or art of determining terrain relief, by any
method.
- imagery
- Visible representation of objects and (or) phenomena as
sensed or detected by cameras, infrared and multispectral
scanners, radar, and photometers. Recording may be on
photographic emulsion (directly as in a camera or indirectly
after being first recorded on magnetic tape as an electrical
signal) or on magnetic tape for subsequent conversion and
display on a cathode ray tube.
- infrared scanner (thermal mapper)
- Instrument that detects infrared radiation and converts
the detected energy to an electrical signal for recording on
photographic film or magnetic tape.
- isogonic chart
- Chart showing isogonic lines properly labeled with their
magnetic declination.
- isogonic line
- Line joining points on the Earth's surface having equal
magnetic declination as of a given date.
- isopleth map
- See: map, isopleth
- Kelsh plotter
- Double-projection plotting instrument utilizing swinging
lamps to transmit light through contact- size diapositives
(positive transparencies).
- land use classification system
- Coding system of categories and subcategories designed for
use on a map to designate land or water use.
- land use map
- See: map, land use
- landmark
- Monument of material mark or fixed object used to
designate a land boundary on the ground: any prominent
object on land that may be used to determine a location or a
direction in navigation or surveying.
- latitude
- Angular distance, in degrees, minutes, and seconds of a
point north or south of the Equator.
- lead line
- Line weighted with lead for making depth soundings in
water.
- levee
- Artificial bank confining a stream channel or limiting
adjacent areas subject to flooding; an embankment bordering
a submarine canyon or channel, usually occurring along the
outer edge of a curve.
- level surface
- Surface which at every point is perpendicular to the
plumbline or the direction in which gravity acts.
- leveling
- Surveying operation in which heights of objects and points
are determined relative to a specified datum.
- line copy (line drawing) Map copy suitable for
reproduction without the use of a screen; a drawing composed
of lines as distinguished from continuous- tone copy.
- line map
- See: map, line
- longitude
- Angular distance, in degrees, minutes, and seconds, of a
point east or west of the Greenwich meridian.
- low water:
- Minimum height reached by a falling tide. The height may
be due solely to the periodic tidal forces or it may have
superimposed upon it the effects of meteorological
conditions.
- low water line
- Intersection of the land with the water surface at an
elevation of low water. Not to be confused with mean low
water line.
- magnetic declination
- See: declination
- map
- Graphic representation of the physical features (natural,
artificial, or both) of a part or the whole of the Earth's
surface, by means of signs and symbols or photographic
imagery, at an established scale, on a specified projection,
and with the means of orientation indicated.
- map, base
- Map on which information may be placed for purposes of
comparison or geographical correlation. The term "base
map" was at one time applied to a class of maps now
known as outline maps. It may be applied to topographic
maps, also termed "mother maps" that are used in
the construction of other types of maps by the addition of
particular data.
- map, bathymetric
- Maps delineating the form of the bottom of a body of
water, or a portion thereof, by the use of depth contours
(isobaths).
- map, cadastral
- Map showing the boundaries of subdivisions of land, often
with the bearings and lengths thereof and the areas of
individual tracts, for purposes of describing and recording
ownership. It may also show culture, drainage, and other
features relating to land use and value. See:plat
- map, choropleth
- Thematic map in which areas are colored, shaded, dotted,
or hatched to create darker or lighter areas in proportion
to the density of distribution of the theme subject.
- map digitization
- Conversion of map data from graphic to digital form.
- map, engineering
- Map showing information that is essential for planning an
engineering project or development and for estimating its
cost. It usually is a large-scale map of a small area or of
a route. It may be entirely the product of an engineering
survey, or reliable information may be collected from
various sources for the purpose, and assembled on a base
map.
- map, flood control
- Map designed for studying and planning control projects in
areas subject to flooding.
- map, forestry
- Map prepared principally to show the size, density, kind,
and value of trees in a designated area.
- map, geologic
- Map showing the structure and composition of geologic
features.
- map hypsographic
- Map showing relief with elevations referred to the national
geodetic vertical datum of 1929.
- map, hypsometric
- Map showing relief by any convention, such as contours,
hachures, shading, or tinting.
- map, isopleth
- Map consisting of lines connecting places of equal value
of distribution for a given theme such as rainfall or
temperature.
- map, land use
- Map showing by means of a coding system the various
purposes for which parcels of land are being used by man.
- map, line
- Map composed of lines as distinguished from photographic
imagery.
- map, orthophotographic
- See: orthophotographic map
- map, photographic
- See: photomap
- map, planimetric
- Map that presents only the horizontal positions for
features represented. distinguished from a topographic map
by the omission of relief in measurable form. The features
usually shown on a planimetric map include rivers, lakes,
and seas; mountains, valleys, and plains; forests, and
prairies; cities, farms transportation routes, and public
utility facilities; and political and private boundary
lines. A planimetric map intended for special use may
present only those features essential to the purpose to be
served.
- map projection
- Orderly system of lines on a plane representing a
corresponding system of imaginary lines on an adopted
terrestrial or celestial datum surface. Also, the
mathematical concept for such a system. For maps of the
Earth, a projection consists of 1) a graticule of lines
representing parallels of latitude and meridians of
longitude or 2) a grid.
- map series
- Family of maps conforming generally to the same
specifications and designed to cover an area or a country in
systematic pattern.
- map, slope (clinometric map)
- Map showing the degree of steepness of the Earth's surface
by the use of various colors or shading for critical ranges
of slope.
- map, soil
- Map that shows the constitution, structure, and texture of
the soil and identifies ongoing erosion.
- map, storm evacuation
- Map designed to identify coastal areas subject to
flooding, to indicate recommended areas of refuge, and to
emphasize available evacuation routes.
- map, thematic
- Map designed to provide information on a single topic,
such as geology, rainfall, population.
- map, topographic
- Map that present the horizontal and vertical positions of
the features represented; distinguished from a planimetric
map by the addition of relief in measurable form.
- marsh, coastal
- Area of salt-tolerant vegetation in brackish and (or)
saline-water habitants subject to tidal inundation.
- marsh, freshwater
- Tract of low wet ground, usually miry and covered with
rank vegetation.
- mean high water
- Tidal datum that is the arithmetic mean of the high water
heights observed over a specific 19-year Metonic cycle
(National Tidal Datum Epoch). For stations with shorter
series, simultaneous observations are made with a primary
control tide station to derive the equivalent of a 19-year
value. Use of "mean high tide" is discouraged.
- mean high water line
- Intersection of the land with the water surface at the
elevation of high water. See: shoreline
- mean low water
- Tidal datum that is the arithmetic mean of the low water
heights observed over a specific 19-year Metonic cycle
(National Tidal Datum Epoch). For stations with shorter
series, simultaneous observations are made with a primary
control tide station to derive the equivalent of a 19-year
value. Use of "mean low tide" is discouraged.
- mean low water line
- Intersection of the land with the water surface at the
elevation of low water.
- mean sea level
- Tidal datum that is the arithmetic mean of the hourly
water elevations observed over a specific 19-year Metonic
cycle (National Tidal Datum Epoch). Shorter series are
specified in the name; that is, monthly mean sea level and
yearly mean sea level. See: datum
- meander line
- Metes-and-bounds traverse approximately along the mean
high water line of a permanent body of water. By
following the sinuosities of the bank or shoreline,
the meander line provides data for computing the area of
land remaining after the water area has been segregated. A
meander line differs from other metes and bounds
surveys in that it does not ordinarily determine or fix
boundaries.
- meanderable
- Capable of being depicted by reference to a meander line.
- meridian
- Great circle on the surface of the Earth passing through
the geographical poles and any given point on the Earth's
surface. All points on a given meridian have the same
longitude.
- metes and bounds
- Method of describing land by measure of length (metes) of
the boundary lines (bounds).
- Metonic cycle
- Period of 235 lunations or about 19 years. devised by
Meton, an Athenian astronomer (5th century B.C.) for the
purpose of obtaining a period at the end of which the phases
of the moon recur in the same order and on the same days as
in the preceding cycle.
- metric system
- Decimal system of weights and measures based on the meter
as a unit length and the kilogram as a unit mass.
- monoscopic
- Pertaining to the observation of a single photograph or
other view.
- monument (surveying)
- Permanent physical structure marking the location of a
survey point. Common types of monuments are inscribed metal
tablets set in concrete posts; and metal rods driven in the
ground.
- mosaic, aerial
- Assembly of aerial photographs whose edges usually have
been torn or cut selectively and matched to the imagery on
adjoining photographs to form a continuous representation of
a portion of the Earth's surface.
- multiplex
- Stereoplotter of the double-projection type characterized
by its use of reduced- scale diapositives and stationary
lamphouses with condensing lenses.
- multispectral scanner (MSS)
- Device for sensing radian energy in several channels of
the electromagnetic spectrum.
- national geodetic vertical datum of 1929
- Reference surface established by the U.S. Coast and
Geodetic Survey in 1929 as the datum to which relief
features and elevation data are referenced in the
conterminous United States; formerly called "mean sea
level 1929."
- National Map Accuracy Standards
- Specifications promulgated by the U.S. Office of
Management and Budget to govern accuracy of topographic and
other maps produced by Federal Agencies.
- navigable waters
- Water usable, with or without improvements, as routes for
commerce in the customary means of travel on water.
- neatline
- Line separating the body of a map from the map margin. On
a standard quadrangle map, the neatlines are the
meridians and parallels delimiting the quadrangle.
- oceanic survey
- Survey or examination of condition in the ocean or any
part of it, with reference to animal or plant life, chemical
elements present, temperature gradients, etc. See:
hydrographic survey
- offshore
- Comparatively flat zone of variable width that extends
from the outer margin of the rather steeply sloping
shoreface to the edge of the continental shelf.
- orientation
- Establishing correct relationship in direction with
reference to points of the compass; the state of being in
correct relationship in direction with reference to the
points of the compass.
- origin of coordinates
- Point in a system of coordinates that serves as a zero
point in computing the system's elements or in prescribing
its use.
- orthophotograph
- Photograph having the properties of an orthographic
projection. It is derived from a conventional perspective
photograph by simple or differential rectification so that
image displacements caused by camera tilt and terrain relief
are removed.
- orthophotographic map
- Map produced by assembling orthophotographs at a specified
uniform scale in a map format.
- orthophotomap
- Orthophotographic map with contours and cartographic
treatment, presented in a standard format, and related to
standard reference systems.
- orthophotoquad
- Monocolor orthophotgraphic map presented in a standard
quadrangle format and related to standard reference systems.
It has no contours and little or cartographic treatment.
- orthophotoscope
- Photomechanical device used in conjunction with a
double-projection stereoplotter for producing
orthophotograph.
- overedge
- Any portion of a map lying outside the nominal map border
(neatline).
- overlay
- Printing or drawing on a transparent or translucent medium
intended to be placed in register on a map or other graphic
and which shows details not appearing or requiring special
emphasis on the base material.
- overprint
- New material printed on a map or chart to show data of
importance or special use, in addition to those data
originally printed.
- parallel of latitude
- A circle, or approximation of a circle, on the surface of
the Earth, parallel tot he Equator, and connecting points of
equal latitude; a circle of the celestial sphere
parallel to the ecliptic, and connecting points of equal
celestial latitude.
- photogrammetry
- Science or art of obtaining reliable measurements or
information from photographs or other sensing systems.
- photomap (photographic map)
- Map made by adding marginal information, descriptive data,
and a reference system to a photograph or assembly of
photographs.
- plain
- Region of uniform general slope, comparatively level, of
considerable extent, and not broken by marked elevations and
depressions (it may be an extensive valley floor or a
plateau summit); an extent of level or nearly level land; a
flat, gently sloping, or nearly level region of the sea
floor.
- planetable
- Instrument consisting essentially of a drawing board on a
tripod and some type of sighting device (alidade)
with attached straightedge, used for plotting the lines of
survey directly from observation in the field.
- planimetric map
- See: map, planimetric
- planimetry
- Plan details of a map - those having no indication of
relief or contour.
- plat
- Diagram drawn to scale showing all essential data
pertaining to the boundaries and subdivisions of a tract of
land, as determined by survey or protraction. As used by the
Bureau of Land Management, the drawing which represents the
particular area included in a survey, such as township,
private land claim, or mineral claim, and the lines
surveyed, established, or retraced, showing the direction
and length of each such line; The relation to the adjoining
official surveys; the boundaries, descriptions, and area of
each parcel of land subdivided; and, as nearly as may be
practicable, a representation of the relief and improvements
within the limits of the survey.
- prime meridian
- Meridian of longitude 0 degrees, used as the origin for
measurements of longitude. The meridian of Greenwich,
England, is the internationally accepted prime meridian on
most charts. However, local or national prime meridians are
occasionally used.
- projection, map
- See: map, projection
- public land system
- Public lands are subdivided by a rectangular system of
surveys established and regulated by the Bureau of Land
Management. The standard format for subdivision is by townshipsmeasuring
6 miles (480 chains) on a side. Townships are further
subdivided into 36 numbered sections of 1 square mile (640
acres) each.
- quad-centered photograph
- Middle exposure of a phototriplet (three consecutive
aerial photographs) take so that the middle photograph is
exposed directly above the center of the quadrangle
and the preceding and following photographs are exposed
directly above the boundaries of the quadrangle. The flying
height is set such that the quad-centered photograph covers
the entire quadrangle.
- quadrangle
- Four-sided area, bounded by parallels of
latitude and meridians
of longitude used as an area unit in mapping (dimensions are
not necessarily the same in both directions). Also, a
geometric figure of significance in geodetic surveying.
- radial-line plotting
- Determination of the location of points by the successive
intersection and resection of direction lines radiating from
the radial centers of overlapping aerial photographs.
- rectification, differential
- The process of scanning and reprojecting a photograph onto
a horizontal plane in differential elements to remove
displacements caused by tilt and relief. The process may be
accomplished by any one of a number of instruments developed
specifically for the purpose.
- rectification, simple
- Projection of an aerial photograph (mathematically,
graphically, or photographically) from its plane onto a
horizontal plane by translation, rotation, and (or) scale
change to remove displacement due to tilt of the camera.
- relief
- Elevations and depressions of the land or sea bottom.
- relief shading
- Technique for making hypsography on a map appear three
dimensional by the use of graded shadow effects. Generally,
the features are shaded as though illuminated from the
northwest.
- remote sensing
- Process of detecting and (or) monitoring chemical or
physical properties of an area by measuring its reflected
and emitted radiation.
- representational fraction
- Scale of a map or chart expressed as a fraction or ratio
that relates unit distance on the map to distance measured
in the same unit on the ground.
- reproduction
- Summation of all processes involved in printing copies
from an original drawing. A printed copy of an original
drawing made by the processes of reproduction
- scale
- Relationship existing between a distance on a map, chart,
or photograph and the corresponding distance on the Earth.
- sea level (water level)
- Height of the surface of the sea at any given time.
- section
- Unit of subdivision of a township; normally a
quadrangle 1 mile square with boundaries conforming to meridians
and parallels within established limits, and
containing 640 acres as nearly as practicable.
- sensor
- Technical means, usually electronic, to extend man's
natural senses by detecting emitted or reflected energy. The
energy may be nuclear, electromagnetic (including the
visible and invisible portions of the spectrum), chemical,
biological, thermal, or mechanical
- shoreline
- Intersection of the land with the water surface.
- slope map
- See: map, slope
- soil map
- See: map, soil
- spheroid
- Mathematical figure closely approaching the geoid in form
and size and used as a surface of reference for geodetic
surveys. A reference spheroid or ellipsoid is a spheroid
determined by revolving an ellipse about its shorter (polar)
axis and used as a base for geodetic surveys of a large
section of the Earth (such as the Clarke spheroid of 1866
which is used for geodetic surveys in the United States).
- spot elevation
- Point on a map or chart whose height above a specified
datum is noted, usually by a dot or a small sawbuck and
elevation value. Elevations are shown, on a selective basis,
for road forks and intersections, grade crossings summit of
hills, mountain
- stadia
- Technique of distance measurement wherein the observer
reads the intercept subtended on a graduated rod between two
marks on the reticle of the telescope.
- standard-accuracy adjustment
- See: adjustment, standard-accuracy
- state plane coordinate system
- Coordinate systems established by the U.S. Coast and
Geodetic Survey (now the National Ocean Survey), usually one
for each state, for use in defining positions of points in
terms of plane rectangular (x,y) coordinates.
- stereocompilation
- Production of a map or chart manuscript from aerial
photographs and geodetic control data by means of
photogrammetric instruments.
- stereoplotter
- Instrument for plotting a map by observation of
stereomodels formed by pairs of photographs.
- stereoscopic
- Pertaining to the use of binocular vision for observation
of a pair of overlapping photographs or other perspective
views, giving impression of depth.
- storm evacuation map
- See: map, storm evacuation
- subsidence
- Decrease in the elevation of land surface due to tectonic,
seismic, or artificial forces, without removal of surface
material.
- survey
- Orderly process of determining data relating to any
physical or chemical characteristics of the Earth. The
associated data obtained in a survey. An organization
engaged in making a survey.
- tacheometer (tachymeter)
- Surveying instrument designed for use in the rapid
determination of distance, direction, and difference of
elevation from a single observation, using a short base
which may be an intergraph part of the instrument.
- thematic map
- See: map, thematic
- theodolite
- Precision surveying instrument for measuring horizontal
and vertical angles.
- tide
- Periodic rise and fall of the water resulting from
gravitational interactions between the Sun, Moon, and Earth.
The vertical component of the particulate motion of a tidal
wave. Although the accompanying horizontal movement of the
water is part of the same phenomenon, it is preferable to
designate this motion as tidal current.
- topographic map
- See: map, topographic
- topography
- Configuration (relief) of the land surface; the graphic
delineation or portrayal of that configuration in map form,
as by contour lines; in oceanography the term is applied to
a surface such as the sea bottom or surface of given
characteristics within the water mass.
- township
- Unit of survey of the public lands of the United States,
normally a quadrangle approximately 6 miles on a side with
boundaries conforming to meridians and parallels
within established limits, containing 36 sections. Also, in
minor governmental subdivision.
- transit
- Precision surveying instrument; a theodolite in which the
telescope can be reversed in direction by rotation about its
horizontal axis.
- traverse
- Sequence of lengths and directions of lines connecting a
series of stations, obtained from field measurements, and
used in determining positions of the stations.
- triangulation
- Method of extending horizontal position on the surface of
the Earth by measuring the angles of triangles and the
included sides of selected triangles.
- trilateration
- Method of surveying wherein the lengths of the triangle
sides are measured, usually by electronic methods, and the
angles are computed from the measured lengths. Compare with
triangulation.
- Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) grid
- Military grid system based on the transverse Mercator
projection, applied to maps of the Earth's surface extending
from the Equator to 84 Degrees north and 80 degrees south
latitudes
- upland
- Highland; ground elevation above the lowlands along rivers
or between hills.
- zenith telescope
- Instrument for observing starts near the zenith (a point
on the celestial sphere directly above the observer's
position).
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