A
ACSM
                    American Congress on Surveying & Mapping (now the NSPS.)
                    
                ADA
                    The Americans with Disabilities Act
                    
                ALTA
                    American Land Title Association
                    
                ALTA Survey
                    ALTA/NSPS Land 
Title Survey is a survey that is completed according to the Standards 
created by the two professional societies (ALTA and NSPS) for property 
that will be covered by a Title Insurance Policy. These standards are 
used in alll 50 states for commercial property transactions.
                    
                APA
                    American Planning Association
                    
                ASCE
                    American Society of Civil Engineers
                    
                Abstract of Title
                    A condensed history or summary of all recorded transactions affecting a particular tract of land.
                    
                Abutter
                    One whose property abuts, is contiguous, or joins at a border or boundary. Also adjoiner
                    
                Acceleration Clause
                    Specifies 
conditions under which the lender may advance the time when the entire 
debt that is secured by the mortgage becomes due. For example, many 
mortgages contain provisions that the note shall become due immediately 
upon the sale of the securing land without the lender’s consent or upon 
failure of the landowner to pay an installment when due.
                    
                Access
                    The right to enter 
and leave a tract of land from a public way; often times, the right to 
enter and leave over the lands of another. See ingress and egress
                    
                Accessory Use
                    Accessory uses are 
land uses within a property that are, in addition to the parcel’s 
principal use, customary, appropriate, subordinate, incidental to, and 
serve the principal use.
                    
                Accretion
                    The gradual accumulation of land by natural causes along a water boundary
                    
                Accuracy
                    The absolute nearness of your measured values and quantities to their true values and quantities.
                    
                Accuracy
Standards
                    A schedule of 
horizontal and vertical accuracy minimums which are divided into orders 
and classes.  Certain surveying projects will specify a certain order or
 class to meet the requirements of a particular project. It should be 
noted that they are the results required to meet each class.
                    
                Acknowledgment
                    The act by which a 
party executing a legal document goes before an authorized officer or 
notary public and declares the same to be his voluntary act and deed. 
This is often times the act of the officer or notary public.
                    
                Acquiescence
                    When a land owner impliedly accepts a boundary location
established by an abutter
                    
                Acre
                    A unit of land measurement containing 43,560 square feet, or 10 square chains.
                    
                Actual Possession
                    Possession which consists of actual physical occupation of property
                    
                Adjoiner
                    Abutting property
                    
                Administrator
                    A person appointed by a probate court to settle the affairs of an individual dying without a will.
                    
                Adverse Possession
                    A claim made against the lands of another by virtue of open and notorious possession of said lands by the claimant.
                    
                Aerial
                    Having to do with or done by aircraft.
                    
                Aerial Survey
                    An on the ground 
survey, a framework of identified points is necessary before detailed 
mapping from aerial photographs and images begins. Typically, a 
vertically aligned camera takes photographs in a series of strips in 
which each picture overlaps about 60 percent of the preceding one; 
adjacent strips overlap as well. Aerial survey uses include development 
of vacant land, drainage patterns, street planning, and airport 
obstruction areas.
                    
                Alignment (Horizontal)
                    A geometric format 
which describes and specifies the horizontal location of a roadway, 
either existing or proposed along some given route.
                    
                Alignment (Vertical)
                    A geometric format which describes and specifies the elevations of station locations along some given route.
                    
                Aliquot
                    The description of 
fractional section ownership used in the U.S. public land states. A 
parcel is generally identified by its section, township, and range. The 
aliquot specifies its precise location within the section, for example, 
the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter. Literally meaning to 
divide.
                    
                Aliquot Part
                    In the PLSS, a standard division such as a half section, quarter section, half-quarter section, etc.
                    
                American Congress on Surveying and Mapping (ACSM)
                    Founded in 1941, 
this society’s goal is to better coordinate surveying and mapping 
activities. Today, ACSM had more than 7,000 member surveyors, 
cartographers, geodesists, and other spatial data information 
professionals. It merged into the NSPS in 2012.
                    
                American Land Title Association (ALTA)
                    A national 
association of title insurance companies, abstractors and attorneys 
specializing in real property law that speaks for the title insurance 
and abstracting industry and establishes standard title policies and 
procedures, with headquarters in Washington, D.C.
                    
                American Planning Association (APA)
                    The leading professional organization in the United States representing urban planners and their communities.
                    
                Amortize
                    To reduce debt by means of regular periodic payments of amounts applicable to both principal and interest.
                    
                Anchor Tenants
                    A large carrier or service provider that attracts other businesses to a location.
                    
                Angle
                    The measure of the difference between two lines of  
direction, expressed in Degrees, Minutes and Seconds normally.
                    
                Apportionment
                    The distribution of excess or deficiency in a number of parcels which were all created simultaneously
                    
                Approved Attorney
                    An attorney 
approved by a title insurance company as one whose opinions of title 
will be accepted by the company and relied upon for the issuance of 
title insurance policies.
                    
                Appurtenance
                    Anything so annexed to land or used with it that it will pass with the conveyance of the land.
                    
                Appurtenant Easement
                    An easement that 
will affect other properties. Examples would be; an easement for ingress
 and egress, parking, storm drains or utilities.
                    
                Arc
                    A part of a circle; also known as a curve.
                    
                Area
                    The quantity of land contained within the boundaries of a parcel
                    
                Area Coordinates
                    A system of laying out a survey on the x-axis or east-west and y-axis or north-south.
                    
                Arpent
                    The unit of length 
and area used in France, Louisiana, and Canada. As a unit of length, 
approximately 191.8 feet. The square arpent is a unit of area, 
approximately 0.85 acres. Article Link
                    
                Artificial Monuments
                    A manmade marker such as a concrete monument, pipe, rod, or drill hole
                    
                As-Built Survey
                    Surveys to show the property's improvements in relationship to the boundary.
                    
                Assessment
                    The imposition of tax, charge or levy, usually according to the established rates.
                    
                Assessor
                    A public official who evaluates property for the purpose of taxation.
                    
                Assignee
                    One to whom a transfer of interest is made. For example, the assignee of a mortgage or contract.
                    
                Assignor
                    One who makes an assignment. For example, the assignor of a mortgage or contract.
                    
                Assume
                    One of the most dangerous words in the surveying lexicon. The best practice is to assume nothing.
                    
                Assumption of Mortgage
                    An obligation 
undertaken by the purchaser of land to be personally liable for payment 
of an existing note secured by a mortgage. As between the lender and the
 original borrower, the buyer, or grantee, is liable on the mortgage 
note.
                    
                Astronomic Meridian
                    An orientation to Polaris by means of a star or sun shot. Also referred to as true north.
                    
                Astronomical Observations
                    Observing celestial
 objects (i.e., sun/solar and the North Star/Polaris).  This is a fairly
 complex procedure. Do not ever observe the sun with the naked eye; or 
thru the eyepiece of an instrument not equipped with a solar filter!
                    
                Attachment
                    The legal seizure of property to force payment of a debt.
                    
                Attorney in Fact
                    One who holds a 
power of attorney from another allowing him to execute legal documents 
such as deeds, mortgages, etc. on behalf of the grantor of the power.
                    
                Authentication
                    A procedure used by base stations to validate a mobile station's identity at system access.
                    
                Avulsion
                    The sudden movement of soil from one property to another as a result of a flood or a shift in the course of a boundary stream.
                    
                Away
                    A request by the instrument operator to the target person to position the target away from the instrument.  (See back up)
                    
                Az
                    Abbreviation for azimuth.
                    
                Azimuth
                    The direction of a 
line in relationship to fixed point (as magnetic True North) expressed 
and measured in a clockwise direction from the north line. This is 
referred to as a North Azimuth or Azimuth North. There exist an azimuth 
measured from the South, but is rarely used north of the equator (except
 in Hawaii.)  An example of an Azimuth would be Azimuth North 270 
degrees which would be equal to a due West direction.
                    
                B
B.M.
                    Bench Mark
                    
                BTS
                    Build-to-suit
                    
                Back Slope
                    The slope associated with a roadway which is the slope farthest away from the roadway.
                    
                Back up (field)
                    A request by the 
instrument operator to the targetperson to move target away from the 
instrument. Ideally, with an approximate distance following, (i.e., back
 up 3.5 feet.)
                    
                Back up (office)
                    An office procedure
 of protecting information by creating a copy of a file on remote device
 (CD or Floppy) to insure a duplicate file in case of loss or corruption
 of original file.
                    
                Backsight
                    The orientation or 
pointing of transit, theodolite or total
station towards a known reference point.  Also the pointing of a level 
towards a point of known elevation or turning point and the recording of
 the reading of the level rod.  This is the procedure used in 
differential leveling. 
                    
                Balls
                    Surveyor’s slang for the numeric value .00, e.g., 4-balls (4.00).
                    
                Bankrupt
                    A person or entity 
who, through a court proceeding, is relieved from the payment of all his
 debts after surrender of all his assets to a court appointed trustee.
                    
                Base Line
                    In the PLSS, a line of latitude running through an initial point. Also, a random line used in a road layout
                    
                Baseline (State)
                    A line which 
divides the state into Townships. In the State of Alabama, there are two
 Baselines; the Huntsville Baseline and the St. Stephens Baseline.  
Townships are generally six miles apart and are numbered to the North 
and to the South of the Baseline.  For example; Township 1 North would 
start at a Baseline and end approximately six miles North of a Baseline.
                    
                Bearing
                    A direction using 
the northeast, southeast, southwest, and northwest quadrants of a 
360-degree circle. Zero is located at the due north and due south while 
due east and west are assigned 90 degrees. A bearing cannot be greater 
than 90 degrees. ie North 42°15'25" East.
                    
                Bench Mark
                    A permanent point, the elevation of which above some definite or assumed datum, is known.
                    
                Beneficiary (of a Trust)
                    A person designated to receive some benefit from the trust estate.
                    
                Binder or Commitment
                    An enforceable 
agreement that upon satisfaction of the requirements which are stated in
 the binder the insurer will issue the specified insurance policy 
subject only to the exceptions stated in the binder. A binder sets forth
 status of title as of a particular date.
                    
                Blanket Easement
                    Also known as a 
floating easement, is an easement that is not limited to a specific 
portion of the servient tract over which it was granted but, instead, 
encumbers the entire tract.
                    
                Blaze
                    A mark or marks on a tree trunk for marking a survey point or boundary point or line
                    
                Bond
                    (1)An insurance 
agreement under which one party becomes surety to pay, within stated 
limits, financial loss caused to another by specified acts or defaults 
of a third party; (2) An interest bearing security evidencing a 
long-term debt, issued by a government or corporation, and sometimes 
secured by a lien on property.
                    
                Boundary
                    Every separation, natural or artificial, which marks the lines of division of two adjoining properties.
                    
                Boundary Resolution
                    The boundary lines 
and corners of any property being surveyed as part of an ALTA/NSPS Land 
Title Survey shall be established and/or retraced in accordance with 
appropriate boundary law principles governed by the set of facts and 
evidence found in the course of performing the research and fieldwork.
                    
                Boundary Survey
                    Survey made to 
establish or reestablish a boundary line on the ground, or to obtain 
data for constructing a map or plat showing a boundary line.
                    
                Bounds
                    The external boundary lines, or limiting lines, of property.
                    
                Break
                    A terrain feature where the slope or angle of the ground, roadway or any other natural or manmade structure changes.
                    
                Break Tape
                    To make a horizontal measurement, usually while measuring up or down a slope, by using less than the full length of a tape
                    
                Breakline
                    A distinct break in
 the earth’s surface and surrounding area. Breaklines could be used to 
define templates for a roadway cross-section. 
                    
                Bubble Level  (bullseye)       
                    An optical level 
consisting of an air bubble in a fluid filled circular container with an
 inscribed circle.  If the bubble level is in proper working order; and 
the air bubble is within the inscribed circle, then the attached object 
is plumb.
                    
                Building (Restriction) Line or Set Back
                    A line fixed at a 
certain distance from the front and/or sides of a lot or at a certain 
distance from a road or street, which line marks the boundary of the 
area within which no part of any building may project. This line may be 
established by a filed plat or subdivision, by restrictive covenants in 
deeds or leases, by building codes or by zoning ordinance.
                    
                Building Code
                    A collection of regulations adopted by a jurisdiction to govern the construction of buildings.
                    
                Bulk Regulations
                    These regulations 
control the size and layout of structures, including regulations as to 
open space, lot lines, maximum building height, and maximum floor area 
ratio.
                    
                Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
                    The branch of the federal government in charge of surveying public lands. BLM Manual
                    
                C
CO
                    Certificate of Occupancy
                    
                COA
                    Certificate of Authorization or Certificate of Appropriateness
                    
                COGO
                    Coordinate Geometry
                    
                Cadastral Surveying
                    Survey relating to land boundaries made to create units suitable for title transfer or to define the limitations of title.
                    
                Call
                    Found in the deed 
description and normally contains a direction, distance, adjoiners, and 
reference trees. (See metes and bounds.)
                    
                Called-For
                    A monument or other evidence called out in a conveyance
                    
                Cardinal Directions
                    Direction of lines which run or extend Due or Directly North, South, East and West.
                    
                Carrier
                    In the 
telecommunications industry, a carrier is a telephone or other company 
that sells or rents telecommunication transmission services.
                    
                Cash Flow
                    A measure of a 
company's financial health. Equals cash receipts minus cash payments 
over a given period of time; or equivalently, net profit plus amounts 
charged off for depreciation, depletion, and amortization.
                    
                Centerline of Survey
                    A stationed 
geometric alignment combining tangents and curvatures defining a central
 baseline. This centerline usually represents the alignment to be used 
for developing a set of plans and ultimately for construction of a 
particular project.
                    
                Central angle
                    The angle formed by lines drawn from the P.C. and the P.T. to the radius point.  This angle is also equal to the delta angle.
                    
                Certificate of Appropriateness (COA)
                    These certificates 
approve work done on buildings within the historic district. Everything 
that can be seen from outside the house, including windows, doors, paint
 colors, materials, rooflines, gutters, fences and yards must receive a 
COA confirming that it is appropriate and acceptable.
                    
                Certificate of Authorization
                    A license or permit
 issued by a State for an entity to perform Engineering or Land 
Surveying as a separate entity from an individual. The entity has a 
name, other than the individual licensee.
                    
                Certificate of Occupancy (CO)
                    A certificate of 
occupancy serves three purposes: (1) what the structure is used for; (2)
 that the structure is suitable for occupancy; and (3) that the 
structure complies with all building codes.
                    
                Certificate of Title
                    An attorney’s written opinion that ownership of the particular parcel of land is, as stated, in his certificate.
                    
                Chain
                    An old surveying 
measurement system measuring 66 feet in length and containing 100 links;
 also referred to as a Gunter’s chain.  80 chains are equal to 1 mile. 
10 square chains equals one acre.
                    
                Chain of Title
                    A sequence of unbroken conveyances from the original title holder to the present title holder
                    
                Chord (long)
                    The part of a curve which is measured along a chord (straight) line from P.C. to P.T. of the same curve.
                    
                Chord (short)
                    A part of a curve which is measured from any point on a curve to another point on the same curve in a chord (straight) line.
                    
                Circle of Uncertainty
                    A circle which has a radius equal to the maximum probable error
                    
                Clear Title
                    Good title of deed, clear from any defects or limitations.
                    
                Closing
                    (1) The process by 
which all the parties to a real estate transaction conclude the details 
of a sale or mortgage. The process includes the signing and transfer of 
documents and distribution of funds. (2) A condition in the description 
of real property by courses and distances at the boundary lines where 
the lines meet to include all the tract of land.
                    
                Closing Corner
                    In the PLSS, it is a
 corner established where a survey line intersects a previously fixed 
boundary at a point between corners. Video Link
                    
                Closure
                    The degree to which a figure closes, i.e., when the end point matches the beginning point on a survey.
                    
                Closure (angular) (closed end)
                    A surveying 
procedure and process in which a closed loop is performed by angle and 
distance measurements from different instrument setups beginning at a 
point which has a known or assumed bearing or azimuth relationship to 
the backsight.  At the end of the process, the original point will be 
occupied and an the original backsight will be observed as a foresight. 
 The resultant difference in these lines of sight will produce an 
angular error, know as angular error of closure.
                    
                Closure (horizontal)
                    A surveying 
procedure and process in which a closed loop is performed by angle and 
distance measurements from different instrument setups beginning at a 
point and observing the same point at the conclusion of the closure.  
This will result in a linear (straight) line error between the point’s 
original location and its location from the last observation.  The ratio
 of linear error between these “same” points to the perimeter of the 
closure traverse is known as the horizontal error of closure.
                    
                Closure (vertical)
                    A surveying 
procedure and process in which a closed level loop begins with the level
 rod placed upon a benchmark and the level set at an observation 
position. Differential leveling is then executed, with the final 
observation being on the original bench mark. There will usually be a 
difference in elevation. To determine if the closure is acceptable, 
multiply the square root of the total distance of the level loop in 
miles by 0.05 (third order) for the maximum allowable vertical error.
                    
                Cloud on Title
                    A claim or encumbrance that could affect or impair the ownership of a particular parcel.
                    
                Co-tenancy
                    Ownership of the same interest in a particular parcel of land by more than one person.
                    
                Coaxial Cable
                    A cable consisting 
of a conducting outer metal tube enclosing and insulated from a central 
conducting core, used for high-frequency transmission of telephone, 
telegraph, and television signals. Also called coaxial line.
                    
                Coinsurance
                    Insurance in which 
more than one insurer shares a part of a single risk. Insurance with 
another of a risk. Coinsurance is usually affected by separate contracts
 of insurance by separate companies, each of which undertakes a 
fractional part of the whole risk.
                    
                Collateral
                    Marketable real or 
personal property that a borrower pledges as security for a loan. In 
mortgage transactions, specific land is the collateral.
                    
                Collocation (also colocation)
                    The mounting or 
installation of an antenna on an existing tower, building, or structure 
for the purpose of transmitting and/or receiving radio frequency signals
 for communications purposes.
                    
                Commitment to Insure
                    A report issued by a
 title insurance company, or its agent, showing the condition of the 
title and committing the title insurance company to issue a form policy 
as designated in the commitment upon compliance with and satisfaction of
 requirements set forth in the commitment. AKA Title Commitment.
                    
                Community Property
                    A category of 
property, existing in some states, in which all property (except 
property specifically acquired by husband or wife as separate property) 
acquired by a husband and wife, or either, during marriage, is owned in 
common by the husband and wife.
                    
                Comprehensive Plan
                    Also known as a 
general plan, master plan or land-use plan, is a document designed to 
guide the future actions of a community. It presents a vision for the 
future, with long-range goals and objectives and for all activities that
 affect the local government.
                    
                Condemnation
                    Taking private property for public use through court proceedings.
                    
                Conditional Use
                    These uses are 
permitted on a permanent basis within a district so long as the 
governing body’s conditions are met. These uses require conditions 
because without them, they could negatively impact the parcel of 
bordering properties. Permits for conditional uses are given at the 
discretion of the governing body.
                    
                Conditional Use Permit
                    A permit granted to
 a property owner to make use of real property in a manner allowed under
 current zoning regulations, but only in accordance with conditions to 
be applied by the zoning authority.
                    
                Conditions and Restrictions
                    A common term used 
to designate the uses to which land may not be put and providing 
penalties for failure to comply. Commonly used by land sub-dividers on 
newly platted areas.
                    
                Condominium
                    A system of 
individual fee ownership of units in a multi-unit structure, combined 
with joint ownership of common areas of the structure and land.
                    
                Conservator
                    A person appointed 
by the court to protect and preserve the lands and property of an 
individual physically incapacitated or otherwise not able to handle his 
own affairs.
                    
                Constructive Notice
                    Notice that is implied whether or not it actually exists.
                    
                Continuous
                    When used in relation to adverse possession, the possession must be unbroken
                    
                Contour
                    Imaginary line on the ground, all points of which are at the same elevation above or below a specific datum.
                    
                Contract
                    Agreement to sell 
and purchase under which title is withheld from the purchaser until such
 time as the required payments to the seller have been completed.
                    
                Control (horizontal)
                    A series of points 
which have been established and proven to be within an allowable and 
specific tolerance of error.  This proof is accomplished by executing a 
closed traverse to determine horizontal and angular error. GPS 
procedures that meet the allowable error are also used to accomplish 
setting horizontal control. 
                    
                Control (vertical)
                    A series of points 
which have been established with elevation and proven to be within an 
allowable and specific tolerance of error.  This proof is accomplished 
by executing a closed level loop to determine vertical error. GPS 
procedures that meet the allowable error are also used to accomplish 
setting vertical control.
                    
                Control Points
                    Points that have 
been established in a series with a high degree of accuracy or 
precision, to which parcels, mapping, or a construction project may be 
tied.
                    
                Convergence
                    Where meridians become closer together as they progress northerly and southerly from the equator
                    
                Convey
                    The act of deeding or transferring title to another.
                    
                Conveyance
                    An instrument by which title to property is transferred; a deed.
                    
                Cooperative
                    A residential multi-unit building owned by and operated for the benefit of persons living within.
                    
                Coordinate Geometry (COGO)
                    The mathematical system of geometry used by surveyors to establish and calculate coordinate values.
                    
                Coordinate System
                    A grid where the 
axes are 90° apart. Also called a Cartesian Coordinate System. In 
surveying, typically a State Plane Coordinate System
                    
                Coordinates
                    A numerical 
designation which determines the location of points. Most surveyors use 
state plane coordinates described as Northing, Easting and Elevations. 
(N,E,Z or y,x,z)
                    
                Corner
                    The beginning or 
end point of any survey line. The term corner does not imply the 
property was in any way square. A corner can be natural (i.e., creek, 
river, ridge) or artificial (i.e., set stone, fence corner, iron pipe).
                    
                Corner Tree
                    Called for in the deed description and normally marked with three hacks or notches where the line enters and exits the tree.
                    
                Course
                    The direction of a line with reference to the meridian.
                    
                Covenant
                    An agreement 
written into deeds and other instruments promising performance or 
non-performance of certain acts, or stipulating certain uses or non-uses
 of the property.
                    
                Critical Mass
                    The point at which 
enough action has occurred for a fundamental change to take place; the 
point where the industry becomes a driving force for global change.
                    
                Cross Section
                    A line which is 
either perpendicular (at 90 degrees) to the tangent (straight); or 
radial to the curve, of the horizontal alignment which extends across an
 area of required information.
                    
                Cul-de-sac
                    The terminus of a street or alley.
                    
                Curve Radius
                    The distance between the curve and the center of the circle
                    
                Curve, horizontal (compound)
                    Two simple curves 
defined as follows. The first curve begins at a P.C.; then turns in one 
direction and follows the curve defined by its particular geometry, to 
its ending point at the P.C.C.  The second curve begins at the same 
P.C.C. then turns in the same direction as the first curve defined by 
its different geometry, to its ending at the P.T.
                    
                Curve, horizontal (reverse)
                    Two simple curves 
defined as follows.  The first curve begins at a P.C.; then turns in one
 direction and follows the curve defined by its particular geometry, to 
its ending point at the P.R.C...  The second curve begins at the same 
P.R.C.; then turns in the opposite direction as the first curve defined 
by its particular geometry, to its ending at the P.T.
                    
                Curve, horizontal (simple)
                    A part of a circle;
 also known as an Arc, which is defined Geometrically as beginning at a 
P.C. and ending at the P.T. of the same curve.
                    
                Curve, vertical
                    A curve used in 
highway design which may be either a sag or a crest designation.  This 
curve is usually a design, centerline designated, and always a profile 
view.
                    
                Cut
                    A construction survey term describing the depth of material to be removed to achieve a desired elevation at a specific location.
                    
                D
DTM
                    Digital Terrain Modeling is a collection of 3-D points that represent the model of the terrain in a specific surveyed area.
                    
                Data Collector
                    An electronic instrument used to collect data from the field.
                    
                Data Rate
                    Maximum number of information bits that can be transmitted per second.
                    
                Datum
                    A reference system 
for computing or correlating the results of surveys. The principal types
 of datum are vertical and horizontal.
                    
                Declination (magnetic)
                    The angle formed by the difference between magnetic north and true north.
                    
                Deed
                    A signed and 
usually sealed document or writing which conveys some legal transfer, 
bargain, or contract from one party to another.
                    
                Deed Bust
                    An error or series 
of errors, which causes the ending point of the calls in a description 
not to close back to the beginning point. A few examples of what might 
cause the deed bust include poor distance or bearing measurements, 
typographical errors, distances measured slope rather than horizontal, 
calls in a description having magnetic meridians measured at different 
times, transposed numbers, and calls being omitted or in the wrong 
order.
                    
                Deed of Trust
                    A conveyance of a 
land title by a maker of a note (the debtor) to a third party, a 
trustee, as collateral security for the payment of the note with the 
condition that the trustee shall re-convey the title to the debtor upon 
payment of the note, and with power in the trustee to sell the land and 
pay the note in the event of a default on the part of the debtor.
                    
                Deficiency Judgment
                    A judgment against a
 person liable for the debt secured by a mortgage in an amount by which 
the funds derived from a foreclosure or trustee’s sale are less than the
 amount due on the debt.
                    
                Deflection Angle
                    An angle measured 
left or right of a forward tangent.  In the case of the delta angle of a
 circular curve, the total deflection angle is equal to one-half (1/2) 
of the delta angle. 
                    
                Degree
                    A unit of measure which divides a circle into 360 increments or parts.
                    
                Degree of Curve
                    The central angle 
subtended by an arc length of 100 feet. This can be more simply 
described as drawing a line from each point at the ends of the 100 foot 
arc to the radius point or center of the circle.  The measurement of 
this angle formed is the degree of curve.
                    
                Delivery
                    The final and absolute transfer of a deed from seller to buyer in such a manner that the seller cannot recall it.
                    
                Delta
                    The angle or 
deflection of a curve, measured by the two lines that converge at the 
radius or the angle that is turned at the PI of the curve.
                    
                Delta Angle
                    An angle formed by 
intersection of two tangent lines with the first tangent line projected 
forward of the point of intersection of the two lines.  The Delta angle 
is equal to the Central angle.
                    
                Density
                    The amount of 
development allowed per acre, and typically calculated by the number of 
dwelling units per acre (for residential) or floor area ratio (for 
commercial).
                    
                Departure
                    With the north-south line being the latitude of a survey, the east-west line is called the departure.
                    
                Devise
                    The disposition of land by a will.
                    
                Differential Leveling
                    A method of 
transferring elevations to a desired location. This is accomplished by 
setting up a level at a location where a level rod, placed on a 
Benchmark whose elevation is known, can be observed and read.  This rod 
reading (referred to as backsight), which is a numerical value expressed
 in hundredths of a foot, is applied to the elevation of the benchmark. 
 The sum or total of these values are referred to as the H.I. (Height of
 Instrument).  The level rod is then moved to another location 
(foresight). The rod is read at this location and its value is 
subtracted from the H.I. and this will be the elevation of the 
foresight.
                    
                Differential Positioning
                    When used with GPS,
 a method whereby positional corrections are transmitted from a GPS 
receiver at a fixed and known location (base) to a rover such that the 
rover can calculate a more accurate position than it would be able to 
without the correction information.
                    
                Discount Points
                    The amount of money
 the borrower or seller must pay the lender to get a mortgage at a 
stated interest rate. This amount is equal to the difference between the
 principal balance on the note and the lesser amount which a purchaser 
of the note would pay the original lender for it under market 
conditions. A point equals one percent of the loan.
                    
                Dominant Estate or Dominant Tenement
                    The land which an easement appurtenant attaches to or the propoerty that uses an easement over another (servient) property.
                    
                Double Center
                    To set a point on a
 projection of a line by sighting the point with the telescope erect and
 inverted and splitting the difference between the two points
                    
                Double Nickel
                    Surveyor’s slang for the numeric value .55, e.g., 6-double nickel (6.55).
                    
                Double Proportionate Measurement
                    In the PLSS, 
restoration of a lost corner by proportionate measurements in both 
east–west and north–south directions from existing monuments
                    
                Dower
                    An estate for life 
to which a married woman by statute is entitled on the death of her 
husband. In most states it is a life estate of one third of the value of
 all land which the husband owned during their marriage. Dower has been 
abolished by statute in some states. The reason for requiring a wife’s 
joining in the deed of any land by her husband is the release of her 
dower right.
                    
                Drill Hole
                    A hole made in stone or concrete for the purpose of locating a point or property corner.
                    
                Drones
                    Unmanned aerial 
vehicles (UAVs), otherwise known as “drones”, have been introduced to 
the land surveying industry. These small, ultra-light weight aircraft 
can be piloted by remote and can take detailed survey information while 
simultaneously transmitting that data back to a data collector. This 
creates highly accurate maps and provides valuable data to companies and
 individuals who are considering major projects on large areas of land.
                    
                �
“Dead Man”        
                    An unmanned target 
placed over a backsight point. This enables the instrument operator to 
occupy multiple setups using a common indivisible backsight.
                    
                E
E-mail (Electronic Mail)
                    Messages, usually 
text, sent from one person to another via computer. E-mail can also be 
sent automatically to a large number of addresses (Mailing List).
                    
                EDGE
                    Enhanced Data GSM Environment is a technology used to improve the data transmission rate of a mobile phone network.
                    
                EDM
                    Electronic Distance
 Meter is a method of determining the length between two points using 
electromagnetic waves. EDM is commonly carried out with digital 
instruments called theodolites or total stations.
                    
                ERP
                    Effective Radiated Power describes the sum of all power radiated by an antenna connected to a transmitter. 
                    
                Earnest Money
                    This is an advance 
payment of part of the purchase price a buyer gives with an offer to 
purchase property. Also called a deposit.
                    
                Easement
                    Right of use over 
the property of another. This right may be created by grant, 
reservation, agreement, prescription, or necessary implication, which 
one has in the land of another. It is either for the benefit of land 
(appurtenant), such as right to cross A to get to B, or "in gross" such 
as a public utility easement.
                    
                Easement Appurtenant
                    An easement which attaches to the land not to an individual person, for the benefit of the dominant parcel.
                    
                Easement Implied from Necessity
                    When a grantor 
creates and conveys a landlocked parcel of land, an easement is implied 
over the grantor’s remaining land to a public road.
                    
                Easement Implied from Prior Use
                    When a grantor 
creates and conveys a landlocked parcel of land and there was visible 
access such as a way leading over the grantor’s remaining land to a 
road, an easement is implied.
                    
                Easement Implied from a Plat
                    Common in 
subdivisions containing private roads, it addresses the rights which 
owners in a subdivision have over roads not necessarily required to 
access a public road
                    
                Easement by Implication
                    When a conveyance does not explicitly call for the easement but the easement must have been intended.
                    
                Easement in Gross
                    An easement which is owned by a person and does not attach to the land
                    
                Economic Development
                    The development of 
economic wealth of countries, regions or communities for the well-being 
of their inhabitants. From a policy perspective, economic development 
can be defined as efforts that seek to improve the economic well-being 
and quality of life for a community by creating and/or retaining jobs 
and supporting or growing incomes and the tax base.
                    
                Egress
                    The right to leave a tract of land.
                    
                Electromagnetic Radiation
                    Waves of electric 
and magnetic energy moving together (i.e., radiating) through space at 
the speed of light. Taken together, all forms of electromagnetic energy 
are referred to as the electromagnetic spectrum.
                    
                Electronic Data Collector
                    A small digital 
computer with a screen which connects to a total station or GPS receiver
 for the purpose of collecting data from the device. If the total 
station is servo driven, the data collector can drive the instrument.
                    
                Electronic Distance Measuring Device 
                    A device, usually attached to a total station, which uses light beams to precisely measure distance.
                    
                Electronic Distance Meter
                    An electronic 
distance meter (EDM) is an instrument, which bounces either infrared 
light or a laser beam off a reflector to measure a distance.
                    
                Elevation
                    The height or vertical distance of a point above a datum, usually mean sea level.
                    
                Eminent Domain
                    The power to take private property for use where the public interest can best be served.
                    
                Encroachment
                    Improvements or uses that extend across a property or easement line without written permission.
                    
                Encumbrance
                    A lien, liability or charge upon a parcel of land.
                    
                Endorsement
                    A form issued by the insurer at the request of the insured, which changes term(s) or item(s) in an issued policy or commitment.
                    
                Enhanced Data GSM Environment (EDGE)
                    A faster version of the Global System for Mobile (GSM) wireless service.
                    
                Equity
                    (1) The interest or value which an owner has in real estate over and above the debts against it; (2) A type of court of record.
                    
                Equity Participation
                    A type of mortgage 
transaction in which the lender, in addition to receiving a fixed rate 
of interest on the loan, acquires an interest in the borrower’s land and
 shares in the profits derived from the land.
                    
                Error
                    The difference between an observed or calculated value and a true value. 
                    
                Error of Closure
                    The length or 
length and direction of the gap in a geometric figure where the end 
point is intended to be the same as the beginning point
                    
                Errors and Omissions Insurance
                    A policy that pays for any mistakes a surveyor or other covered professional makes in a project.
                    
                Escheat
                    A reversion of property to the state in those cases where an individual dies without heirs or devisees and without a will.
                    
                Escrow
                    A procedure whereby a disinterested third party handles legal documents and funds on behalf of a seller and buyer.
                    
                Estate
                    The total assets of a person, including real property, at the time of death.
                    
                Estoppel
                    When a property owner induces an abutter to act in a way that is likely to damage the abutter’s interests. Detrimental reliance
                    
                Examination of Title
                    The interpretation of the record title to real property based on the title search or abstract.
                    
                Exception
                    In legal 
descriptions that portion of lands to be deleted or excluded. In title 
commitments those easements or restrictions over the property to be 
conveyed.
                    
                Exception to Coverage
                    The second part of a
 title commitment. A list of items that could be encumbering to the 
property that are known to the title company. This is part of the 
“Schedule B” of the title commitment. These are examined by the Surveyor
 during an ALTA/NSPS Land Title Survey.
                    
                Exclusive 
                    When used in relation to adverse possession, the possessor must not share the possession with the owner
                    
                Exclusive Access Easement
                    This is an easement to allow access to a property such as a driveway for access to a public road, highway or utility access.
                    
                Executor
                    A person appointed by the probate court to carry out the terms of a will.
                    
                Express Easement
                    A written easement
                    
                External of a Curve
                    The distance from the P.I. of a curve to the mid-point of said curve.
                    
                F
FEMA
                    See Federal Emergency Management Agency
                    
                FHA
                    See Federal Housing Administration
                    
                FHLMC (Freddie Mac)
                    See Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
                    
                FNMA (Fannie Mae)
                    See Federal National Mortgage Association
                    
                Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
                    An independent 
agency of the federal government, reporting to the President. Founded to
 reduce loss of life and property and protect our nation's critical 
infrastructure from all types of hazards through a comprehensive, 
risk-based, emergency management program of mitigation, preparedness, 
response and recovery.
                    
                Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac)
                    Federal Home Loan 
Mortgage Corporation, an affiliate of the Federal Home Loan Bank, which 
creates a secondary market in conventional residential loans and in FHA 
and VA loans by purchasing mortgages from members of the Federal Reserve
 System and the Federal Home Loan Bank system.
                    
                Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
                    Federal Housing 
Administration, an agency of the federal government which insures 
private loans for financing of new and existing housing and for home 
repairs under government-approved programs.
                    
                Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae)
                    A federally sponsored, private corporation which provides a secondary market for housing mortgages.
                    
                Fee  
                    An ownership interest in real property
                    
                Fee Simple Absolute
                    Absolute ownership (of land) with unrestricted rights of disposition.
                    
                Field Book
                    A small bound or loose leaf book used to record survey field data. This may also be collected by the Data Collector.
                    
                Field Notes
                    Accumulation of measurements and observations gathered by field crew.
                    
                Filed Plan
                    Drawing of plan, showing all vital data gained during a survey, which has been filed in the registry of deeds.
                    
                Fill 
                    A construction survey term describing the depth of material to be added to achieve a desired elevation at a specific location.
                    
                Financing Statement
                    A document prepared
 for filing with the Register of Deeds or Secretary of State indicating 
that personal property or fixtures is encumbered with a debt.
                    
                First Guide Meridian East and West
                    Meridians established 24 miles east and west of the principal meridian
                    
                First Station
                    See Point of Beginning
                    
                Fixtures
                    Any item of personal property so attached to real property that it becomes a part of the real property.
                    
                Flood Hazard
                    Classification for any area determined to be within a high risk of flooding.
                    
                Flood Plain
                    Belt of low, flat ground bordering a stream channel that is flooded when runoff exceeds the capacity of the stream channel.
                    
                Flood Zone
                    An area that has 
been carefully studied by the government to determine the probability of
 flooding due to intensive storms or, along the coast, severe tidal 
conditions. Flood zones are designated to specify the probability and 
frequency of anticipated flood conditions and range in severity from 
areas of minimal flooding to those where flooding would be frequently 
expected to occur.
                    
                Floor Area Ratio (FAR)
                    The relationship 
between the total amount of usable floor area that a building has, or 
has been permitted for the building, and the total area of the lot on 
which the building stands. This ratio is determined by dividing the 
total, or gross, floor area of the building by the gross area of the 
lot.
                    
                Foot (International)
                    Also expressed in 
tenths and hundredths. In conversion to meters, the International foot 
is equal to 0.3048 meters. This can be derived by multiplication - 2.54 
cm/in x 12 inches ÷ 100 cm/m
                    
                Foot (US Survey)
                    A unit of 
measurement which in Surveying work, is composed of ten (10) tenths 
(1/10) of a foot.  The tenth is further subdivided in ten increments, 
each of which is equal to one hundredth (1/100) of a foot.  In 
conversion to other units of measurement, the U.S. survey foot is used 
by location.  For example; a US Survey foot is equal to 0.3048006096 
meters. This can be derived from dividing the number of inches in a foot
 by the number of inches in a meter (12/39.37).
                    
                Foreclosure
                    Legal process by 
which a mortgagee of real property is deprived of his/her interest in 
that property due to failure to comply with terms and conditions of the 
mortgage.
                    
                Foresight
                    A target or prism to which an instrument will measure an angle and/or angle and distance
                    
                Freddie Mac
                    See Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
                    
                Front Slope
                    That portion of a roadway which slopes away from the shoulder or next to the edge of the roadway. 
                    
                Front Up
                    A request from 
instrument operator to the targetman who is standing to one side of the 
prism rod to move the rod in a forward direction.  Ideally, this request
 should be followed by an approximate distance (i.e., front up 3 feet.)
                    
                Frontage
                    The front of a building or lot.
                    
                G
GIS
                    See Geographic Information System
                    
                GNMA
                    See Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae)
                    
                GPS
                    See Global Positioning System
                    
                General Plan
                    See “Comprehensive Plan”
                    
                General Warranty Deed
                    A deed containing a
 covenant whereby the seller agrees to protect the buyer against being 
dispossessed because of any adverse claim against the land.
                    
                Geodetic Marker
                    A survey marker placed by the government in either a horizontal or vertical plane.
                    
                Geographic Information System (GIS)
                    A GIS is a computer
 system that captures, stores, analyzes, and displays data related to 
locations on Earth's surface. GIS can show different types of data on a 
map, such as streets, buildings, and vegetation, which can help people 
see patterns and relationships.
                    
                Ginney
                    Surveyor’s slang 
for a wooden dowel 6-9 inches in length with a sharpened end. Set in the
 ground to mark survey points. AKA a hub.
                    
                Ginnie Mae (GNMA)
                    See Government National Mortgage Association
                    
                Give Line
                    The process by which a person holds a prism pole or plumb bob string over a point so it can be sighted by the instrument
                    
                Glass
                    Surveyor’s slang for the EDM prism.
                    
                Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS)
                    A constellation of 
satellites and ground stations owned by the United States, Russia, EU, 
and China used for the positioning of receivers on the earth’s surface
                    
                Global Positioning System (GPS)
                    A series of 24 US 
geosynchronous satellites that continuously transmit their position. 
Used in personal tracking, navigation, and automatic vehicle location 
technologies.
                    
                Gore
                    A thin triangular 
piece of land, the boundaries of which are defined by surveys of 
adjacent properties. Loosely, an overlap or gap between properties. See 
also strip.
                    
                Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae)
                    A government 
corporation which provides a secondary market for housing mortgages and 
special assistance to mortgagee financing housing under special FHA 
mortgage insurance programs.
                    
                Gradient (Front and Back Slope)
                    A method of 
defining a slope which is usually expressed as a ratio (i.e.; for 
example, 3:1 slope means 3 feet horizontal and 1 foot vertical).
                    
                Gradient (Pavement Cross Slope)
                    A method of 
defining the cross-slope of pavement which is described as inch per foot
 (1/4 inch per foot, for example) or as a percentage per foot (0.02 foot
 per foot, for example).
                    
                Gradient (pipe)
                    A method of 
defining the rate of fall or slope of a pipe which is usually expressed 
percentage per foot (.001 foot per foot, for example).
                    
                Grandfathered Clauses
                    The term 
“grandfathering” is a misnomer for a legal prior non-conforming use. A 
“grandfathering” situation occurs when an existing use was in compliance
 with zoning regulations at the time it began, but changes to the 
regulations have caused the use to become non-conforming. If the owner 
sells the property, the buyer will have the right to continue the 
non-conforming use, causing people to label the use as “grandfathered.”
                    
                Grantee
                    One who acquires land or some interest in land
                    
                Grantor
                    One who conveys land or some interest in land
                    
                Grid
                    A network of uniformly spaced, parallel lines intersecting at right angles.
                    
                Grid North
                    The direction of the north–south grid lines on a state plane coordinate system. Lines are parallel to the Grid Meridian.
                    
                Group Parking Facility
                    A building, structure or lot used for parking that serves more than one dwelling unit.
                    
                Guardian
                    One appointed by the court to administer the affairs of an individual not capable of administering his own affairs.
                    
                Gun
                    Surveyor’s slang. See EDM
                    
                Gunter’s Chain
                    A Chain. Unit of length equal to 66 feet (4 rods) long with 100 links (0.66 ft each)
                    
                H
HAL
                    An acronym for Horizontal Alignment.
                    
                HI
                    An abbreviation for Height of Instrument.
                    
                Hand Level
                    A low-precision instrument used in obtaining elevations.
                    
                Hand Leveling
                    A low-precision 
surveying operation used in obtaining elevations.  This operation uses a
 Hand level, a Jacob’s staff, a cloth/fiberglass tape and a level rod.
                    
                Hectare
                    Metric unit of measure denoting 10,000 square meters or 2.471 acres, or 107,639 square feet.
                    
                Heir
                    One who might 
inherit or succeed to an interest in lands under the rules of law 
applicable where an individual dies without leaving a will.
                    
                Heirs and Assigns
                    Terminology used in
 deeds and wills to provide that the recipient receives a “fee simple 
estate” in lands rather that a lesser interest.
                    
                Hiatus
                    A gap or space unintentionally left between, when attempting to describe adjacent parcels of land.
                    
                Highway Marker
                    A stone bound placed by the State Highway Department denoting the sidelines, curve points, and offsets of highway points.
                    
                Hinge Point        
                    A point on the back
 slope of a roadway where the design template or typical section 
distances and slope grades meets natural ground.        
                    
                Homestead
                    An estate in land, 
which a householder has in the property that he and his family occupy as
 their residence. Their estate is exempt from forced sale to satisfy 
householder’s debts.
                    
                Horizontal Angle
                    An angle which is 
measured on a horizontal plane.  This angle is measured from the 
backsight by the instrument, which is usually expressed as angle right 
or left of the Backsight line.
                    
                Horizontal Measure
                    The law requires 
all distance measurements to be on a horizontal plane. Today, many 
surveyors measure the slope distance and the vertical angle to calculate
 the horizontal distance. However, some old surveys used slope measure 
causing a resurvey of those lines to have distances that appear shorter 
than what was called for in the deed.
                    
                Horizontal Measurement or Horizontal Distance
                    A measurement made in a plane which is perpindicular to the line of gravity.
                    
                Horizontal Plane
                    An imaginary flat 
surface that extends in all directions from a point on or near the 
surface of the surface of the earth.  This plane will be tangent 
(touching the arc of the earth in only one place) to the earth’s arc.  
This plane will be perpendicular to an axis drawn from the center of the
 earth thru the point of observation.
                    
                Hostile
                    When used in context with adverse possession and prescription, the possession must be adverse to the interests of the owner
                    
                Hours
                    Surveyor’s slang for degrees. Based on 60 minutes in an hours and 60 minutes in a degree.
                    
                Hub and Tack
                    Surveyor’s slang for a 2 x 2” stake set in the ground that contains a nail (tack) to precisely mark the point being set.
                    
                Hydrology
                    The 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.
                    
                I
Improvements
                    Those additions to raw lands tending to increase value such as buildings, streets, sewers, etc.
                    
                In Testate
                    Designates the estate or condition of failing to leave a will at death.
                    
                Inch(s)
                    A unit of 
measurement which equals one twelfth (1/12) of a foot.  This unit of 
measure is used in surveying work to describe pipe diameter, property 
iron diameter, and tree diameter measured at chest height.
                    
                Inchoate Courtesy
                    The imperfected interest the law gives a husband in the lands of his wife.
                    
                Inchoate Dower
                    The imperfected interest the law gives a wife in the lands of her husband.
                    
                Incorporate
                    To make a part of
                    
                Ingress
                    The right to enter a tract of land.
                    
                Initial Point
                    In the PLSS, a fixed point from which townships are established
                    
                Instrument
                    A surveying instrument such as a transit, theodolite or total station
                    
                Instrument Person
                    The person charged 
with the responsibility for the care and use of an instrument such as a 
level, transit, theodolite or total station
                    
                Insurance of Title
                    Insurance as to who
 owns a specified interest in designated real estate, and showing as 
exceptions to the insured interest the defects, liens and encumbrances 
which exist as against that insured interest.
                    
                Insured Estate
                    The first part of a
 title commitment that describes the interest in the specific property 
that is going to be insured. This is part of the Schedule ‘A’ of the 
title commitment.
                    
                Intention of the Parties to the Conveyance
                    What the grantor and grantee agreed to at the time of the conveyance
                    
                Intersections
                    Coordinate geometry
 calculations which determine the location of a point not usually 
located by field surveying location applications.  There are three types
 of intersection routines; Bearing-Bearing, Bearing-Distance, and 
Distance and Distance. Each has a specific application and results.
                    
                Intervisible
                    The ability to visually see between points
                    
                Invert
                    To turn a rod upside down and get a reading on an overhead object. Surveyors also use this term to describe flowlines of pipes.
                    
                J
Jacob's Staff
                    A rod, pole, or 
similar object of a known height. This height is usually an even foot 
increment measured from the bottom of the staff to the center of a hand 
level placed on top of the staff.  This even foot increment allows for 
ease of calculating elevations.
                    
                Joint Tenancy
                    Where two or more persons hold real estate jointly for life, the survivors to take the interest of the one who dies.
                    
                Judgment
                    (1) A formal decision or decree of a court; (2) a certificate evidencing such a decree
                    
                Judgment Lien
                    The charge upon the
 lands of a debtor resulting from the decree of a court properly 
recorded in the office of the county recorder in the county in which the
 property is located.
                    
                Junior Mortgage
                    A mortgage, the lien of which is subordinate to that of another mortgage.
                    
                Junior and Senior Rights
                    Rights in property acquired through a sequence of conveyances by a common grantor.
                    
                Jurisdiction
                    The official power to make legal decisions and judgments.
                    
                L
L or LC or A
                    The length of a curve along the curve itself. Often called the Arc Length
                    
                LMDS (Local Multipoint Distribution Service)
                    Located in the 28 
GHz and 31 GHz bands, LMDS is a broadband radio service designed to 
provide two-way transmission of voice, high-speed data and video 
(wireless cable TV). FCC rules prohibit incumbent local exchange 
carriers and cable TV companies from offering in-region LMDS.
                    
                LOMA
                    Letter of map amendment as referred to by FEMA relating to the change in the flood hazard of a particular location or structure.
                    
                Labor
                    The unit of area used in Mexico and Texas equal to 1 million square varas. Approximately equal to about 177.1 acres (71.67 ha.) 
                    
                Land Use Plan
                    See “Comprehensive Plan”
                    
                Land Use Regulation
                    Ordinances of 
government including requirement of permits and codes created to ensure 
private use of land resources are aligned with policy standards. Some 
forms of land use regulations including housing codes, regulations for 
subdivisions, zoning ordinances, and building codes.
                    
                Landlocked
                    Refers to a 
property that has no direct access to a public street, so the only way 
on or off the property is to cross land owned by someone else. Usually, a
 landlocked property gains street access through a legal permission 
called an easement.
                    
                Landmark
                    A survey mark made on a permanent feature of the land such as a tree, pile of stones, etc.
                    
                Latitude
                    The angular distance (in degrees, minutes, and seconds) of a point on the Earth’s surface north or south from the equator.
                    
                Latitude and Departure
                    Latitude is the 
distance measured northerly on a coordinate grid. Departure is the 
distance measured easterly on a coordinate grid
                    
                Lattice
                    A self-supporting 
tower that is tapered from the bottom up, usually with three or four 
legs. Lattice structures can reach heights of up to 1,000 feet.
                    
                League (legua)
                    The unit of area 
used in the southwest United States, equal to 25 labors, or 25 million 
square varas. Also approximately equal to 4,428.4 acres in Texas, or 
4,439 acres in Louisiana.
                    
                Lease
                    A grant of the use of property for a term of years in consideration of the payment of a monthly or annual rental.
                    
                Legal Blemish
                    Blemishes on a piece of property, such as a zoning violation or fraudulent title claim.
                    
                Legal Description
                    A specific way of identifying and locating a piece of real estate that is acceptable to a court.
                    
                Legend
                    An explanatory list of the symbols on a map or chart shown either by a symbol or abbreviation.
                    
                Legs
                    Surveyor’s slang for tripod.
                    
                Lessee
                    One who takes lands upon a lease.
                    
                Lessor
                    One who grants lands under a lease.
                    
                Level Loop
                    The process of 
measuring and proving the elevation at a specified location relative to 
another known elevation. For all differential leveling, it is good 
practice to close the leveling loop. Closing the loop is accomplished by
 returning to the original starting point. If we were to complete our 
level loop with complete accuracy, our computed final elevation would be
 exactly the same as the benchmark elevation used to initiate the 
survey. This comparison of the starting elevation and the computed 
ending elevation is termed closure.
                    
                Level Rod
                    A rod used in leveling operations, graduated or incremented in 1/100ths of a foot.
                    
                Level, Automatic
                    A type of level 
having a compensating device that maintains a horizontal line of sight 
when the instrument is approximately leveled. Level is used to transfer 
elevations from one point to another.
                    
                Level, Electronic
                    A surveying 
instrument capable of transferring elevations with a high degree of 
precision.  This is accomplished by use of a special level rod, 
bar-coded on one side.  This bar-coded side is faced toward the 
instrument, the rod is plumbed and leveled, and the bar code is scanned 
by the instrument and a reading is displayed and/or recorded.
                    
                Lien
                    A hold, a claim or a charge allowed a creditor upon the lands of a debtor.
                    
                Life Estate
                    A grant or reservation of the right of use, occupancy and ownership for the life of an individual.
                    
                Line
                    The direction of a 
survey. Also a request by the target person to the instrument operator 
to position a line rod or prism rod for direction orientation.
                    
                Line Rod
                    A rod which is usually painted in alternating colors of red and white, each color being one foot in length.
                    
                Line Tree
                    Any tree that is on a property line, specifically one that is also a corner to another property.
                    
                Linen
                    A type of material 
upon which ink drawings of land surveys were formerly drawn for filing 
in registries of deeds. Mylars are used now, if not replaced by 
electronic filing.
                    
                Link
                    A land measurement that equals 1/100th of a chain or 66/100th of a foot.
                    
                Lis Pendens
                    A legal notice 
recorded in the official records of a county to indicate that a suit is 
pending affecting the lands where the notice is recorded.
                    
                Littoral Rights
                    Property rights related to water boundaries along an ocean or lake
                    
                Load Capacity
                    The quantity that is or can be carried at one time.
                    
                Local Area Network (LAN)
                    A data 
communications system that (a) lies within a limited spatial area, (b) 
has a specific user group, (c) has a specific topology, and (d) is not a
 public switched telecommunications network, but may be connected to 
one.
                    
                Locate
                    Using an instrument to turn an angle and measure a distance to a target or other object
                    
                Locus
                    The location. The property at issue. The property being surveyed
                    
                Longitude
                    The angular 
distance (in degrees, minutes, and seconds) of a point on the Earth’s 
surface east or west of the Greenwich meridian.
                    
                Lost Corner
                    In the PLSS, where 
the location of the corner cannot be determined from marks or evidence, 
so that it must be replaced by measurements from
other corners
                    
                Lot
                    A measured parcel of land having fixed boundaries. A part of a plat of multiple lots.
                    
                Lot Area
                    The area (in square feet or acreage) of a separate zoning lot.
                    
                Lot Coverage
                    That portion of a zoning lot which, when viewed from above, is covered by a building or impervious surface.
                    
                Lot Depth
                    The mean horizontal distance between the front lot line and rear lot line of a zoning lot.
                    
                Lot Width
                    The mean horizontal distance between the side lot lines of a zoning lot, normally measured at the front property line.
                    
                Low Distortion Projection
                    A two dimensional 
rectangular coordinate system
located at an elevation designed to minimize distortion between 
measurements made on the ground and those on the coordinate system
                    
                Low Frequency (LF)
                    Any frequency in the band from 30 kHz to 300 kHz.
                    
                M
Magnetic Dip
                    The angular downward tilt of a compass needle as measured from horizontal
                    
                Magnetic North
                    The northerly 
direction in the Earth's magnetic field indicated by the north-seeking 
pole of a compass needle. Based on the Magnetic North Pole, which moves 
daily. Surveyors today shouldn't use this for defining directions.
                    
                Majority
                    This is the age at which a person is entitled to handle his own affairs.
                    
                Marketable Title
                    A good title about which there is no fair or reasonable doubt.
                    
                Master Plan
                    See “Comprehensive Plan”
                    
                Mean High Water
                    The average of all high water heights observed over a 19 year period
                    
                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).
                    
                Meander Corner
                    In the PLSS, an intersection of a meander line with a section or township line
                    
                Meander Line
                    Metes-and-bounds 
traverse approximately along the mean high water line of a permanent 
body of water. A meander line differs from other metes-and-bounds 
surveys in that it does not ordinarily determine or fix boundaries. 
Video Link
                    
                Measure Angle
                    To use an instrument to measure an angle
                    
                Mechanics Lien
                    A lien allowed by 
statute to contractors, laborers, and suppliers against a property upon 
which work has been performed or materials supplied to seek payment.
                    
                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.
                    
                Meter
                    An international 
unit of measure which is equal to 39.37 inches (U.S. Survey foot) 
precisely. The International foot is 0.3048 meters precisely.
                    
                Metes and Bounds
                    A method of 
describing the limits or boundaries of a parcel of land by distance and 
direction and by reference to physical monuments
                    
                Minute
                    A unit of angle measurement.  There are sixty (60) minutes in one Degree.        
                    
                Monument
                    A natural or placed
 artificial physical object intended as a landmark or survey marker such
 as a stone shaft or iron rod sunk into the ground; normally at a 
property corner.
                    
                Moratorium
                    When a governing 
body is considering the amendment of its zoning ordinance or planning 
documents, it may decide to enact a temporary ban, a “moratorium” on 
zoning applications for the uses being considered.
                    
                More or Less
                    A term used not 
because someone did not know the exact area, but to show that the tract 
is conveyed by the area contained within the description and not by the 
acre. This also refers to the inherint error present in ALL 
measurements.
                    
                Mortgage
                    An instrument used to encumber land as security for a debt.
                    
                Mortgage Acceleration Clause
                    See Acceleration Clause
                    
                Mortgagee
                    A designation for the mortgage holder on lands.
                    
                Mortgagor
                    A designation for the mortgage borrower on lands.
                    
                Municipality
                    A city, town or other district possessing corporate existence and usually its own local government
                    
                N
NEPA
                    See National Environmental Policy Act 1969
                    
                NSPS
                    National Society of Professional Surveyors
                    
                National Environmental Policy Act 1969 (NEPA), 42 USC §§ 4321 et seq.
                    NEPA is the basic 
national charter for protection of the environment. It requires all 
Federal agencies to implement procedures to make environmental 
consideration a necessary part of an agency's decision-making process. 
Specifically, NEPA and the regulatory guidelines established by the 
Council on Environmental Quality which implemented the Act, 40 C.F.R. §§
 1500 et seq., require all Federal agencies to take into account 
environmental consequences when making decisions which could be 
considered major federal actions. The FCC complies with NEPA by 
requiring licensees to review their proposed actions for environmental 
consequences.
                    
                National Society of Professional Surveyors (NSPS)
                    This society is 
open to all professional surveyors and to persons trained, registered, 
or interested in the profession of surveying and mapping. NSPS strives 
to establish and further common interests, objectives, and political 
effort that would help bind the surveying profession into a unified body
 in the United States.
                    
                Natural Monument
                    Streams, lakes, shores, ledge outcrops, and sometimes streets and highways, used as boundary markers.
                    
                Non-Conforming Lot
                    A lot is one that, 
at the time of its establishment, met the minimum lots size requirements
 for the zone in which it is located but which, because of subsequent 
changes to the minimum lot size applicable to that zone, is now smaller 
than that minimum lot size.
                    
                Non-Conforming Structure
                    A structure that 
complied with zoning and development regulations at the time it was 
built but which, because of subsequent changes to the zoning and/or 
development regulations, no longer fully complies with those 
regulations.
                    
                Non-Conforming Use
                    A use of property 
that was allowed under the zoning regulations at the time the use was 
established but which, because of subsequent changes in those 
regulations, is no longer a permitted use.
                    
                North (Grid)
                    A system of map 
orientation where the surface of the earth is divided by lines running 
North and South, East and West according to some grid coordinate system.
 North is based on the meridian of that grid coordinate system, which is
 based on True North. There is a Grid Convergence value at each grid 
line.
                    
                North (Magnetic)
                    A system of map 
orientation which uses Magnetic North as determined by the location of 
the earth’s magnetic poles at the time of observation.  Note: Magnetic 
North changes from year to year, and daily. It is not used by 
professional surveyors.
                    
                Notary Public
                    An official authorized by law to attest and certify certain documents by his hand and official seal.
                    
                Note
                    A written promise 
to pay an amount of money at a certain time or in a certain number of 
installments. The note usually provides for payment of interest. The 
note is at times secured by a mortgage.
                    
                O
Obliterated Monument
                    In the PLSS, where there is no remaining evidence of a monument but there is evidence of its location
                    
                Occupied Point
                    A point on which the instrument or GPS receiver is set
                    
                On Line
                    A condition whereby a target, prism pole, plumb bob, etc. is in line with the vertical cross hair of an instrument
                    
                Open Space
                    Any open piece of land that is undeveloped (has no buildings or other built structures) and is accessible to the public.
                    
                Open and Notorious
                    When related to 
adverse possession and prescription, the possession must be so openly 
visible that it would be obvious to the owner
                    
                Open-End Mortgage
                    A mortgage or deed of trust written so as to secure and permit advancing of funds in addition to the amount originally loaned.
                    
                Optical Plummet
                    An optical device including a right angle prism which allows a tribrach to be precisely centered over a point
                    
                Original Survey
                    A survey in which new boundaries are created
                    
                Orthophotography
                    An orthophoto is an image of ground features in their true map coordinates, created photogrammetrically from aerial photography.
                    
                Overburdening an Easement
                    Use of an easement which was not contemplated when the easement was created
                    
                Overlay District
                    A district 
superimposed upon another district which supersedes, modifies or 
supplements the underlying regulations. Limited height districts and 
commercial overlay districts are examples of overlay districts.
                    
                Overloading an Easement
                    Use of an easement to service land which was not contemplated when the easement was created
                    
                Ownership
                    The right to possess and use property to the exclusion of others.
                    
                P
P.C.
                    Point of Curvature.  The beginning of a curve.
                    
                P.C.C.
                    Point of Compound Curve
                    
                P.I.
                    Point of Intersection.  In a curve, the point where the back tangent intersects the forward tangent.
                    
                P.R.C.
                    Point of Reverse Curve
                    
                P.T.
                    Abbreviation for Point of Tangency. The end of a curve.
                    
                PLSS
                    The Public Land Survey System. A rectangular system of dividing land used in the western United States
                    
                POB
                    See Point of Beginning
                    
                POC
                    See Point of Commencement
                    
                Parapet
                    A low wall or protective barrier that extends vertically above the roof of a building or other structure.
                    
                Parcel
                    A part or portion of land.
                    
                Parole Evidence
                    Evidence gathered by the surveyor from verbal testimony of landowners or adjacent landowners as to the location of boundaries.
                    
                Partition
                    Division of land, usually by a legal proceeding, among the parties who were formerly co-owners.
                    
                Party Chief or Crew Chief
                    The person in charge of a survey crew
                    
                Party Wall
                    A wall which divides two adjoining properties and in which each of the owners shares the rights.
                    
                Patent
                    A document issued for the purpose of granting public lands to an individual.
                    
                Perch
                    (See Pole)
                    
                Personal Property
                    Anything subject to ownership that is not real property
                    
                Photogrammetric Mapping
                    The production of 
base maps from aerial photography. Mapping generated using 
photogrammetry provides a cost-effective method of establishing an 
accurate digital base for such things as urban planning, terrain 
analysis and forest management. Photogrammetry can be used for landfill 
or gravel pit monitoring, determining the location of ore bodies or 
determining proposed locations for utilities, such as pipelines and 
transmission lines.
                    
                Physical Evidence
                    Also called Real Evidence. Physical objects such as
monuments, roads, lakes and rivers
                    
                Pile of Stones
                    heap of stones used to mark a property corner or sometimes placed at intervals along property lines
                    
                Pin
                    A small metal 
cylinder usually of steel, copper, brass or aluminum which is placed 
into the ground, or a hole in stone or concrete for marking a property 
corner
                    
                Plan, Survey Plan, Plat or Map
                    A drawing showing the results of a survey
                    
                Planimeter
                    A mechanical instrument used to trace the boundary of a plane figure for the purpose of calculating its area
                    
                Planned Unit Development (PUD)
                    A mixed-use development (often residential, retail and office) with a cohesive design plan.
                    
                Planning Board
                    See “Planning Commission”
                    
                Planning Commission
                    A group of citizens appointed by local government officials to conduct hearings and recommend amendments to zoning ordinances.
                    
                Plat or Plot
                    A map representing a piece of land subdivided into lots with streets shown thereon.
                    
                Plenum
                    The space above a 
suspended ceiling or under a raised floor, used to circulate air back to
 the heating or cooling system in a building.
                    
                Plumb
                    A condition in which an object points straight down vertically towards the center of the earth.
                    
                Plumb the Rod
                    A condition in which an object points straight down vertically towards the center of the earth.
                    
                Point
                    A specific place or position.  This may or may not be monumented.
                    
                Point Code        
                    An alphanumeric identifier of a particular point. For example; point code 200 (or EP) identifies a point as edge of pavement.
                    
                Point Number
                    A unique and specific number assigned to a point.
                    
                Point of Beginning (POB)
                    The starting point of the surveyed property.
                    
                Point of Commencement (POC)
                    A known point 
outside the property boundary that ties the property to a well 
established corner. This ties the POB to a known point on the face of 
the Earth, for example to a Section corner from the Public Land Survey 
System.
                    
                Point on Line
                    A point set on an existing line
                    
                Polaris
                    This is the another
 name of the North Star. It is in the constellation Ursa Minor and marks
 the end of the handle of the Little Dipper. Polaris's location, less 
than 1° from the north pole, makes it a very important navigational 
star. Surveyors will locate and observe the location of Polaris in order
 to establish true north.
                    
                Pole
                    Unit of measure; 25 links or 16 ½ feet. One fourth of a chain.
                    
                Polyline (plan view)
                    A type of line in 
surveying software that in plan view has only two dimensional values, 
i.e. horizontal or x and y, but no real vertical value.
                    
                Polyline (profile view)
                    A type of line in surveying software that in profile view represents a station and elevation value along a certain alignment.
                    
                Positional Dilution of Precision (PDOP)
                    In GPS or GNSS, a number indicating the effect of satellite geometry on the accuracy of measurements
                    
                Possession Line
                    A use line defined 
by a fence, tree line, painted lines, mowed areas, or some other means 
that may or may not agree with the record (deed) calls.
                    
                Post-Processing
                    When used in 
conjunction with static GPS, it is a software method used to adjust and 
calculate the coordinates of points which were previously occupied by 
GPS receivers
                    
                Power of Attorney
                    An instrument authorizing another to act on one’s behalf as his agent or attorney.
                    
                Practical Location
                    Where the location of a boundary is not determined from a writing but by agreement, acquiescence, or occupation
                    
                Precision
                    The consistency of a
 group of measurements which should not be confused with the accuracy of
 these measurements. Relates to the repeatability of the group of 
measurements.
                    
                Prepayment Penalty
                    Penalty to the mortgagor for payment of the mortgage debt before it becomes due.
                    
                Prescription
                    Acquiring an easement through use, not by virtue of a writing
                    
                Primary Use
                    The principal or dominant use of the land, such as residing in a home, running business or manufacturing a product.
                    
                Principal Meridian
                    In the PLSS, a line of longitude running through an initial point
                    
                Prism  
                    A glass reflector 
also called a corner cube prism, which is used to reflect light from an 
EDM back to the EDM so that the distance between the EDM and the Prism 
can be measured
                    
                Prism Offset
                    An adjustment to 
the distance measured between an EDM and a prism used to account for the
 speed and path of light and the mounting of the prism.
                    
                Prism Pole
                    A portable extendable pole used for mounting a prism commonly used for measuring to physical evidence
                    
                Prism Rod
                    A rod which is 
threaded on one end to accept a prism and pointed on the other end to 
place upon a point.  The rod also has a bullseye bubble level attached 
to allow the rod to be plumbed.  
                    
                Private Street
                    A street which may be used only by those having deeded rights
                    
                Privity
                    A mutual or successive relation between parties to the same real property
                    
                Professional Surveyor
                    A person who has 
fulfilled all the experience and testing requirements outlined in the 
code of the state that governs the practice of land surveying. This 
qualifies a person to survey for the public. It is illegal for anyone to
 survey for the public without a license.
                    
                Project Management
                    Managing and planning job tasks to ensure projects are completed in a timely and successful manner.
                    
                Property Corner
                    A place where two or more land ownership boundaries cross or meet.  This position or place may or may not be monumented.
                    
                Property Line
                    A place where two or more land ownership boundaries cross or meet.  This position or place may or may not be monumented.
                    
                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 townships measuring six miles (480 chains) on a side.
                    
                Public Records
                    Records which by law impart constructive notice of matters relating to land.
                    
                Public Street
                    A street over which the general public has a right of access
                    
                Pueblo
                    A Spanish land grant of less than 1,000 acres.
                    
                Punk
                    Surveyor’s slang for railroad.
                    
                Purchase Money Mortgage
                    A mortgage given by
 the purchaser to the seller simultaneously with the purchase of real 
estate to secure the unpaid balance of the purchase price.
                    
                Q
Quadrant
                    One quarter of a circle: 90°. Used in surveying to refer to the four quadrants: Northeast, Southeast, Southwest and Northwest
                    
                Quiet Title
                    The removal of a cloud on title by proper action in a court.
                    
                Quiet Title Action
                    To bring into court a proceeding to establish title to land by forcing the claimant to establish his claim.
                    
                Quit Claim
                    The release or relinquishment of a claim to land.
                    
                Quit Claim Deed
                    A legal instrument 
used to release one person's right, title, or interest to another 
without providing a guarantee or warranty of title.
                    
                R
R.O.W.
                    Abbreviation for 
Right-Of-Way.  The right-of-way line is a boundary between the owner of 
the right-of-way and the adjoining land owners.
                    
                REA
                    Reciprocal easement agreement.
                    
                RSA
                    Rural Service Area
                    
                Rancho
                    A Spanish land grant of more than 1,000 acres.
                    
                Range
                    In the U.S. public 
land surveying system, a north-south column of townships, identified as 
being east or west of a reference longitudinal meridian, for example, 
Range 3 West.
                    
                Rangefinding
                    Optically measuring distance using stadia hairs in a surveying instrument telescope
                    
                Real Estate
                    Pertaining to 
things fixed, permanent, or immovable, as to lands and tenements; as, 
real property, in distinction from personal or movable property.
                    
                Real Property
                    Land and things affixed to the land
                    
                Rebar
                    Steel concrete reinforcing bar sometimes placed into the ground as a means of locating a property corner
                    
                Reconnaissance
                    The time spent in the field prior to the traverse finding evidence of the property lines and corners relative to the survey.
                    
                Reconveyance
                    A deed from the 
mortgagee or trustee of a deed of trust which releases specific property
 from the lien of the mortgage or deed of trust.
                    
                Record Boundaries
                    Boundaries described in a deed or plan
                    
                Record Evidence
                    Written evidence recorded with a public agency such as deeds and plans.
                    
                Record Evidence
                    Written evidence recorded with a public agency such as deeds and plans
                    
                Record Line
                    The property line 
as defined by the deeds. The surveyor is responsible for retracing the 
record line and showing any encroachments resulting from possession 
lines on the plat of survey. The court, not the surveyor, has the right 
to establish a possession line as a boundary line as long as the 
requirements of the law are fulfilled.
                    
                Record Monuments
                    A boundary marker called for in a deed such as the name of an abutter
                    
                Redemption
                    The right of the 
owner in some states to reclaim title to his property if he pays the 
debt to the mortgagee within a stipulated time after foreclosure.
                    
                Reference Station
                    When used with RTK 
GPS, a GPS receiver located at a fixed and known point which is capable 
of transmitting correction data to a GPS rover
                    
                Reference Tree
                    A tree used to 
reference a corner or a monument on line and normally marked with three 
hacks or notches facing the corner or monument. They are sometimes 
referred to as witness trees.
                    
                Reference point
                    A point with a known relationship to another point used to assist in the locating or re-establishment of another point. 
                    
                Reflector
                    A prism used to reflect light back to an EDM.
                    
                Reflectorless Total Station
                    A total station which is able to measure distances to an object without the need for using a prism
                    
                Registered Land Surveyor
                    See Professional Surveyor
                    
                Registry of Deeds
                    Place where deeds and plans of land, mortgages, and realty instruments are filed.
                    
                Reinsurance
                    The act of an insurer is sole insurer for a portion of the risk and shares the risk in the excess amount with the reinsurers.
                    
                Reissue Rate
                    A reduced rate of 
title insurance premium applicable in cases where the owner of the land 
has been previously insured in an owner’s policy by the insurer within a
 certain time.
                    
                Relative Positional Precision
                    The length of the 
semi-major axis, expressed in feet or meters, of the error ellipse 
representing the uncertainty due to random errors in measurements in the
 location of the monument, or witness, marking any corner of the 
surveyed property relative to the monument, or witness, marking any 
other corner of the surveyed property at the 95 percent confidence 
level. This is estimated by the results of a correctly weighted least 
squares adjustment of the survey.
                    
                Reliction
                    The increase in land by permanent withdrawal of water along a water boundary
                    
                Remainder
                    An interest or 
estate in land in a person other than the grantor in which the right of 
possession and enjoyment of the land is postponed until the termination 
of some other interest or estate in the land.
                    
                Remote
                    A point set using 
control points as a basis for location. The remote point is identified 
point code 112 and is monumented by a hub and tack, nail and bottle cap,
 P-K nail or other material.  This point is used for mapping purposes.  
                                                
                    
                Report of Survey
                    A summary of the 
facts and findings regarding the survey. It is a sealed document that 
lists the entire record search, identify any significant problems 
incurred during the survey, and provide explanation why and how the 
corners were set. The report is optional depending upon the situation, 
and does not need to be required unless a client would choose to do so.
                    
                Resection
                    A surveying 
procedure which involves the setting up of the total station on a point 
which has not been located. This point is placed in a location where two
 “known” or more points can be observed. Upon measuring the angle and 
distance to 2 or more points, a position for the unknown point can be 
calculated.
                    
                Reserved Easement
                    An easement created by a grantor that reserves a right to use property of the grantee
                    
                Responsible Charge
                    Direct control and supervision of a person working under a licensed land surveyor
                    
                Restriction
                    Provision in deed 
or will or in a “Declaration of Conditions, Covenants and Restrictions” 
which limits in some way the right to use land or convey its title.
                    
                Reticle
                    Horizontal and vertical cross hairs in a surveying instrument telescope used to accurately sight a target
                    
                Retracement Survey
                    A survey attempting to reestablish an existing survey line. This is sometimes referred to as a resurvey.
                    
                Reversion
                    Provision in 
conveyance by which, upon the happening of an event or contingency, 
title to the land will return to the grantor his successor in interest 
in the land.
                    
                Rezoning
                    A change in the 
zoning district applied to a parcel of land, and thus a change to the 
permitted uses and accompanying regulations with that parcel.
                    
                Right of Way
                    The right of a person to pass over the land of another.
                    
                Riparian
                    Belonging to or relating to the bank of a river.
                    
                Riparian Rights
                    Property Rights along a river or stream
                    
                Road
                    A way used for travel. Same as Street
                    
                Robotic Total Station
                    A total station 
containing servo motors which are capable of positioning the horizontal 
and vertical axes in order to measure to evidence and transmit data to a
 remote data collector
                    
                Rod
                    See Pole
                    
                Rod Person
                    Usually, the least experienced crew member. Often, the person who uses a prism pole to locate evidence
                    
                Rodman
                    Surveyor’s slang for the person holding the rod with the EDM prism—the modern chain carrier.
                    
                Rood
                    A unit of area containing 40 square rods, or ¼ acre, or 10,890 square feet.
                    
                Rooftop sites
                    Antennae located on
 rooftop sites are widely used in metropolitan areas where space, 
zoning, and construction issues may be prohibitive.
                    
                Rover
                    A GPS receiver 
located on a prism pole or tripod which is moved around from point to 
point for the purpose of locating evidence or setting points. It 
normally receives correction data from a reference station
                    
                Run-Rate
                    The revenues that a
 company would have in the next 12 months if the current revenue rate 
remained unchanged; usually calculated by multiplying the latest 
quarter's revenues by four.
                    
                S
Sale and Leaseback
                    A financial device 
which an owner of land may employ to raise money and still have the use 
of the land by selling the land to his financier and immediately leasing
 it back for the period he wishes to use it.
                    
                Scale
                    A representative 
relationship between an actual horizontal distance and distance factor 
ratio. For example, 1-in= 50-ft.  Also a ratio of foot per foot, as with
 U.S.G.S. quad maps where 1 foot = 24,000 foot actual horizontal 
distance.
                    
                Scope of an Easement
                    The type of use allowed by an easement
                    
                Section
                    In the PLSS, a portion of a township approximately one mile square containing 640 acres
                    
                Section or Section of Land
                    Unit of subdivision
 of a township; normally a quadrangle one mile square with boundaries 
conforming to meridians and parallels within established limits, 
containing 640 acres as nearly as practical.
                    
                Secular Change
                    The difference 
between two magnetic meridians measured at different times. It is also 
known as variation and the difference should always be clockwise. Most 
original surveys were based on the magnetic meridian as measured with a 
compass. Again, using magnetic directions is severly frowned upon by 
todays surveyors
                    
                Servient Estate or Servient Tenement
                    The land burdened by an easement appurtenant
                    
                Set 
                    A series of points which are connected by a set line which carries elevations along this line from point to point.
                    
                Set Back Lines
                    Those lines which delineate the required distances for the location of structure in relation to the perimeter of the property.
                    
                Set Up
                    A term used to describe the total station or level, tripods and all necessary items “setup” and ready to begin collecting data.
                    
                Set an Angle
                    To set a specific angle on an instrument
                    
                Sexigesimal System
                    A system based on 60, where each degree contains 60 minutes and each minute contains 60 seconds
                    
                Shoot
                    Surveyor’s slang for measuring the angle and distance with an EDM.
                    
                Shot
                    A request by the targetperson to “reg” or record an observation.  
                    
                Sideshot
                    Observations and data collection made from a Setup Before moving to the next traverse point.
                    
                Sideshots
                    Leaving zero set on a backsight and taking shots on multiple targets
                    
                Single Proportionate Measurement
                    In the PLSS, restoring a lost corner by using proportionate measurements along a line from other recovered monuments
                    
                Site Acquisition
                    The right location 
can be key to the success of a project and operation. The process may 
include identifying optimal locations; budget planning; negotiating 
lease terms; zoning support; building permits; photos, narrative 
explanations of acquisition terms and site findings, preliminary 
latitude, longitude and ground elevation of the site; locations of 
utilities; and a field sketch of the proposed site arrangement.
                    
                Site Plan
                    A diagram that 
shows the layout of a property or “site”. A site plan may include the 
location of buildings and structures, as well as property features such 
as driveways, walkways, landscaped areas, gardens, pools or water, 
trees, terraces and more.
                    
                Skew
                    The following is 
the proper way to report the “skew” of an existing or proposed drainage 
flow:
A pipe that is flowing at an angle of 90° to centerline is at a 0° skew.
  Everything else is measured from this zero skew and is the reported 
existing skew will be based on a couple of things:  
•        Stream is either flowing to the left or to the right of CL
•        The outlet is either skewed ahead (up line) or back (back line)
 of the 0° skew
Example:  A pipe that is flowing to the left of line and is skewed “back
 line” at approximately 15° off the 90° would be described as a skew of:
 15° Lt. Bk.
Example:  A pipe that is flowing right and is skewed “up line” by 30° 
off the 90° would be described as a skew of: 30° Rt. Ah.                
                                
(DO NOT confuse the Skew calculation with the Deflection Angle along the
 centerline.)
                    
                Slope Stake        
                    A stake and hub 
usually placed on an offset from the Hinge Point to preclude removal 
during earthwork.  The information on the stake will specify cut or fill
 at specific distance, slope grade and centerline station.
                    
                Solaris
                    Pertaining to the 
Sun. Surveyors will locate and observe the location of the Sun in order 
to establish true north. AKA taking a Sun Shot
                    
                Span and Rise
                    Width and Height. 
The method of arch pipe and culvert measurement where the horizontal 
distance across the opening is noted first and the vertical distance 
across the opening is noted last.   
                    
                Special Use Permit
                    A special use 
permit allows a landowner to obtain a tract of land for a use that does 
not fall directly under the permitted usage for that specifically zoned 
area. In most areas, the community is separated into different zones 
determined by the community’s zoning commission. These zones are then 
given a specific set of “by-right” permitted uses.
                    
                Special Warranty Deed
                    A deed containing a
 covenant whereby the seller agrees to protect the buyer against being 
dispossessed because of any adverse claims to the land by the seller, or
 anyone claiming through him.
                    
                Specific Plans
                    Specific plans are 
mechanisms by which local planning agencies can specify development 
regulations and land use preferences for certain unique physical areas. 
Specific planning regulations apply only in specified geographic areas, 
allowing local regulatory agencies the ability to tailor planning and 
zoning regulations to unique topography or circulation patterns in 
special areas.
                    
                Spike
                    Surveyor’s slang for typically a 60-penny nail used to mark survey points in hard ground.
                    
                Spot Elevation
                    Point of a map or chart whose height above a specified datum is noted, usually by a dot or a small "+" and elevation value.
                    
                Stadia
                    Technique of 
distance measurement and differences of elevation wherein the observer 
reads the intercept subtended on a graduated rod between two marks on 
the reticle of the telescope.
                    
                Stadia Hairs
                    Short horizontal 
cross hairs in a surveying instrument telescope precisely positioned 
above and below the horizontal cross hair used for rangefinding
                    
                Standard Parallels
                    In the PLSS, parallels established 24 miles north and south of base lines
                    
                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.
                    
                Station
                    A point on the horizontal and/or vertical alignment.
                    
                Station/Offset
                    A method of 
location; relative to horizontal alignment, where a position is 
determined by a station on the horizontal alignment and the 
perpendicular distance right or left from that station to the position.
                    
                Statute of Frauds
                    A law requiring that the conveyance of interests in land by evidenced by a writing signed by the grantor
                    
                Street
                    A way used for travel. Same as Road
                    
                Street Line
                    The sideline of a street or way
                    
                Strip
                    A rectangular piece
 of land adjoining a parcel, created when a resurvey turns up a tiny bit
 larger than the original survey. The difference is accounted for by 
temperature or other effects on measuring chains. See also strip.
                    
                Subdivision
                    A tract of land surveyed and divided into lots for purposes of sale.
                    
                Subsurface Right
                    The right to ownership of everything beneath the physical surface of the property.
                    
                Superelevation
                    A special type of 
roadway surface; situated in a horizontal curve, in which the edge of 
pavement farthest from the radius point begins to elevate above the 
inner edge of pavement (transition of super elevation).  This elevation 
of the outside edge of pavement increases to a point where the elevation
 of the outside edge of pavement is higher than the center of pavement 
(full superelevation).  This results in a banked turn.  Then at a 
specific location; the full superelevation transitions in reverse to the
 normal roadway typical section.  
                    
                Survey
                    (1) A survey is the
 measurement by a licensed surveyor of real property that delineates the
 boundaries of a parcel of land as further defined under state law. A 
survey for land title purposes additionally designates the location of 
all visible evidence of improvements, encroachments, and easements; (2) 
the associated data obtained in a survey; (3) an organization engaged in
 making a survey.
                    
                Survey Foot
                    Used to convert meters to a surveying unit. Precisely equals 12 inches ÷ 39.37 inches per meter.
                    
                Surveying
                    The art and science
 of location of physical features and their relationship to an 
established and recognized datum: by means of measurement in the three 
dimensions of space; distance, direction and elevation.
                    
                T
Tacking
                    When used in 
relation to adverse possession and prescription, the occupation by 
predecessors in title can be used, along with the possession of the 
present occupier to satisfy the time period established by the statute 
of limitations
                    
                Take Out Loan
                    A permanent 
mortgage loan which a lender agrees to make to a borrower upon 
completion of improvements on the borrower’s land. The proceeds of the 
loan are used principally to pay off the construction loan.
                    
                Taking a Shot
                    When a total station is used to measure the angle and distance to a point
                    
                Tangent
                    A line that touches
 a curve such that it is perpendicular to a radius line of the curve. 
Also, an extension of a street line from the PC or PT of a curve
                    
                Tangent Screws
                    Fine positioning screws on a surveying instrument horizontal and/or vertical axis
                    
                Tangent to Curve
                    A tangent line calculated at a point along the curve that is perpendicular to the radius point at the point on the curve.
                    
                Tape
                    A durable and flexible measuring device.
                    
                Target
                    A device usually 
containing a prism and/or highly visible markings which is set over a 
point and which enables an instrument to sight and measure to the point
                    
                Tax Deed
                    The deed given to a purchaser at a public sale of land for nonpayment of taxes.
                    
                Temperature Adjustment
                    A correction applied to a distance made using a steel tape and based on the difference between ambient temperature and 68° F.
                    
                Tenancy in Common
                    An estate or 
interest in land held by two or more persons each having equal rights of
 possession and enjoyment but without any right of survivorship between 
the owners.
                    
                Tenant
                    Any person in possession of real property with the owner’s permission.
                    
                Terrain
                    The surface features of an area of land; topography.
                    
                Testate
                    The estate or condition of leaving a will at death.
                    
                Testatrix
                    A woman who makes or has made a testament or will.
                    
                Thalweg
                    The deepest part of a stream
                    
                Theodolite (the•od•o•lite)
                    A calibrated, 
precision surveying instrument used to determine relative position in 
surveying, navigation, and meteorology. It is similar in construction to
 a surveyor's transit, consisting of a telescope fitted with a spirit 
level and mounted on a tripod so that it is free to rotate about its 
vertical and horizontal axes. Pronounced: thE - odl - It
                    
                Thread
                    The middle of a stream
                    
                Tie Line
                    A dimensioned 
survey line, usually not a property line, used to connect boundaries. 
Tie lines are often used along an irregular and roughly dimensioned 
water boundary as a means of connecting the accurately described points 
of a boundary
                    
                Title Deed
                    The deed constituting the evidence of a person’s legal ownership and possession of land.
                    
                Title Defect
                    Any legal right held by others to claim property or to make demands upon the owner.
                    
                Title Insurance
                    Insurance against loss or damage resulting from defects or failure of title to a particular parcel of real property.
                    
                Title Search
                    An examination of public records, laws and court decisions to disclose the current facts regarding ownership of real estate.
                    
                Topographic Survey
                    A survey having to do with topography or the physical features of a place.
                    
                Topography
                    The physical features of a place; or the study and depiction of physical features, including land elevations.
                    
                Torrens System
                    A governmental 
title registration system wherein title to land is evidenced by a 
certificate of title issued by a public official known as the registrar 
of title.
                    
                Total Station
                    An electronic 
digital surveying instrument used to measure horizontal and vertical 
angles and distances, with provision for electronic storage of data 
and/or transmission of data to external devices
                    
                Township
                    In the U.S. public 
land surveying system, an area six miles square, containing 36 sections.
 The townships are organized in rows and are identified with respect to a
 reference latitudinal baseline, for example, Township 13 North, Range 3
 East. 
                    
                Tracking Total Station
                    A total station which is capable of locking onto a prism or other device and tracking it as it moves
                    
                Transferable Development Rights (TDR)
                    A voluntary, 
incentive-based program that allows landowners to sell development 
rights from their land to a developer or other interested party who then
 can use these rights to increase the density of development at another 
designated location.
                    
                Transit
                    Precision surveying
 instrument; a theodolite in which the telescope can be reversed in 
direction by rotation about its horizontal axis.
                    
                Traverse
                    A procedure for 
gathering field evidence as called for in the deeds. It is a series of 
bearings and distances from one point to another.
                    
                Trespass
                    The intentional intrusion or invasion of the land of another person
                    
                Tribrach
                    An article of 
surveying equipment which is attached to head or top of the tripod.  The
 tribrach is usually attached to the instrument, but a release lever can
 be activated which will allow the removal of the transit/total station 
and installation of an adapter which allows the use of a target.
                    
                Tripod
                    A fixture having three, usually adjustable, legs used to support surveying instruments and other measuring devices
                    
                True North
                    A reference to the true north direction of the North Pole and not the magnetic north. AKA Astronomic North
                    
                Trust
                    A right of property held by one for the benefit of another.
                    
                Trustee
                    A person holding property in trust.
                    
                Turn Angle
                    To use an instrument to measure or set an angle
                    
                Turnkey
                    Supplied, installed, or purchased in a condition ready for immediate use, occupation, or operation.
                    
                Two Peg test
                    A method of 
checking the accuracy of a leveling instrument which involves the 
establishment of two points on fairly level ground or pavement 
approximately 200 feet apart.  The level is then setup and leveled at a 
point nearer one point and rod reading are recorded on both points.  
Then the level is then setup and leveled at a point nearer the next 
point and rod readings are recorded on both points.  Any apparent 
differences will indicate the level instrument is out of adjustment.  
                    
                U
United States Geological Survey (USGS)
                    Created by an act 
of Congress in 1879, the U.S. Geological Survey is the sole science 
agency for the Department of the Interior. The USGS helps resolve 
complex natural resource problems across the Nation and around the 
world.
                    
                Unwritten Title
                    Ownership of property that is not evidenced by written title
                    
                Utility Plan
                    Typically a plan 
showing all visible indications and known underground locations of 
utilities. This plan will show what utilities are located on the 
property and which utilities are available for use to the property. It 
is important to note that underground utility locations are shown only 
by approximate locations per utility companies as-built plans.
                    
                V
Vara
                    Unit of length used
 in the U.S. southwest and the Spanish-speaking world that has values of
 approximately 31-33 inches. The US Supreme Court ruled in 1870 that the
 vara would be 33.33 inches for conversion purposes. The NIST vara 
actually measures 32.9682 inches.
                    
                Variable Width Street
                    A street which does not have a fixed width
                    
                Variance
                    A discretionary, 
limited waiver or modification of a zoning requirement. It is applied in
 situations where the strict application of the requirement would result
 in a practical difficulty or unnecessary hardship for the landowner. 
Typically, the difficulty or hardship must be due to an unusual physical
 characteristic of the parcel.
                    
                Variation
                    A measure of how magnetic north varies with time
                    
                Vendee
                    A purchaser of real property.
                    
                Vendor
                    A seller of real property.
                    
                Vernier
                    A specially divided scale used to increase the precision of reading the horizontal or vertical circle of a surveying transit.
                    
                Vernier Scale
                    A short graduated 
scale that slides along a longer graduated scale and allows the longer 
one to be subdivided into smaller parts. Used in surveying to divide 
angles into minutes and seconds for great accuracy.
                    
                Vertex
                    The point where two or more lines from different directions meet.   The P.I. of a curve is one example of a vertex.
                    
                Vertical Angle
                    An angle which is 
measured between two intersecting lines in a vertical plane.  In 
surveying, it is understood that one of these lines is the horizontal 
plane and the other line is a point on the vertical plane.  This angle 
is measured from a point directly beneath the transit/total station 
(occupied point) to a point on the vertical plane which will increase 
incrementally towards a point in the vertical plane directly overhead. 
                    
                W
WC
                    Witness Corner
                    
                Warranty
                    An agreement and 
assurance by the grantor of real property for himself and his heirs, to 
the effect that he is the owner and will defend the title given.
                    
                Warranty Deed
                    A deed warranting 
that the grantor has a good title free and clear of all liens and 
encumbrances and will defend the grantee against all claims.
                    
                Water Features
                    Springs, ponds, 
lakes, streams, rivers, canals, ditches, marshes, swamps running 
through, outside but within five feet (5’) of the perimeter or forming a
 boundary of a piece of property.
                    
                Wiggle In
                    To make a series of adjustments to the occupied point so that it eventually becomes located at the desired location
                    
                Will
                    A written document properly witnessed, providing for the distribution of property owned by the deceased.
                    
                Wireless
                    Using the 
radio-frequency spectrum rather than some of wire for transmitting and 
receiving voice, data and video signals for communications.
                    
                Witness Corner
                    In the PLSS, a point on a survey line near a corner used when it is not practical to monument the corner itself
                    
                Witness Tree
                    Generally used in 
the public land states, this refers to the trees close to a section 
corner. The surveyor blazed them and noted their position relative to 
the corner in their notebook. Witness trees are used as evidence for the
 corner location.
                    
                Wraparound Mortgage
                    A mortgage that 
secures a debt that includes the balance due on an existing senior 
mortgage and an additional amount advanced by the wraparound mortgagee. 
The wraparound mortgagee thereafter makes the amortizing payments on the
 senior mortgage.
                    
                Written Evidence
                    Documents such as deeds and plans
                    
                Z
Zenith Angle        
                    An angle which is 
measured between two intersecting Lines in a vertical plane.  In 
surveying, it is understood that one on these lines is the vertical 
plane which extends from the plumb line of the occupied point to a point
 directly overhead or the zenith.  The angle is measured from the zenith
 towards a point on the vertical plane which increases incrementally 
towards the occupied point.                           
                    
                Zero Instrument
                    The process of setting an instrument’s zero on a target
                    
                Zero or Perfect Zero
                    Surveyor’s slang for zero degrees, minutes, and seconds (a perfect zero).
                    
                Zoning
                    A section of an 
area or territory established for a specific purpose, as a section of a 
city restricted to a particular type of building, enterprise, or 
activity: a residential zone.
                    
                Zoning Commission
                    See “Planning Commission”
                    
                Zoning Letter
                    is a document prepared by the local municipality to confirm the zoning district designation of the property.
                    
                Zoning Ordinance
                    Created in 
compliance with a governing body’s comprehensive plan, zoning ordinances
 are comprised of maps showing the zoning districts and text setting 
forth the regulation of uses and structures within each type of 
district.
                    
                Zoning Report
                    Prepared by a 3rd 
party that will verify whether an existing property or a planned project
 can meet basic development standards outlined in the zoning code. May 
include a zoning letter to verify some items.