That describes the NZ system except we can also lodge digital data, no hard copy or pdf plans here, you do generate diagrams of your survey but the digital vector data is authoritative.
That describes the NZ system except we can also lodge digital data, no hard copy or pdf plans here, you do generate diagrams of your survey but the digital vector data is authoritative.
Does NZ allow monumentation to be reset via coordinates alone?
The funny thing about GIS. There is a history to it. I have a "GIS through the years" file for my survey.?ÿ
Turns out it's interesting. There is the current GIS, there is a hard copy of an early version done per township for Ag lands, there is a early computer file with poly lines that I have in my autocad files, and finally there are old had drawn tax maps for each township.?ÿ
Guess which one does the best lying out my survey,,,,,,,,,,, the old hand drawn tax map. I wonder how they could figure out where to put these properties,,,,,,there was never a survey filed.?ÿ
From the time of the old hand drawn maps the boundary has degraded through the years in the GIS till we are where it is today, looks to be plus or minus 18 acres incorrectly imputed.?ÿ
Yet in the 1970s and 1980s it was correctly drawn.?ÿ
In the 70's/80's; the tax maps, in Nebraska were drafted by the County Survey Department. Maybe it was like that, where you're from...
The hand drawn tax maps were put together by the engineering dept., same with the city, of course they were not geo-referenced like they are today. One of the local problems was that they did it in house at the beginning, and I sent them lots of data particularly in town. Then they outsourced the GIS and all that data is lost now.
Then they outsourced the GIS and all that data is lost now.
One step forward; 2 steps back...