About Amerisurv| Contact    
Magazine | Newsletter    
Flickr Photos | Advertise    
HomeNewsPhotosNewsletterCommunityStoreJobsAuthorsHistoryArchivesSubscriptionsBlog
 
advertisement


Subscriptions
 
Continuing Series
     RTN
Network corrected real-time is a technological approach to high precision GPS/ GNSS positioning that has been theorized about, studied, experimented with, and implemented in various academic, scientific, and commercial forms for nearly a decade. Many of the various approaches share the fruits of past research, algorithms, and technological tools; some which are in common.
Click Here to begin the series,
or view the Article PDF's Here
 
Featured Job

County of San Diego

Land Surveyor to supervise, coordinate, and perform professional land survey work and engineering survey office work. This is the journey-level class in the Land Surveyor series. Under direction, Land Surveyors perform complex surveys and engineering projects. As project surveyors, incumbents lead groups of professionals and supervise technical staff performing a wide variety of surveying and engineering projects or programs.
Test Yourself

Got Answers?
Test your knowledge with NCEES-level questions.
  Start HERE
Meet the Authors
Check out our fine lineup of writers. Each an expert in his or her field.
Sponsored By


Partner Sites

symbianone
lbszone.com
GISuser.com

 

Associates

ACSM
GIA
ASPRS

newsnow 

Home arrow Authors   The American Surveyor     

Book Marks: The Coast Mappers by Taylor Morrison Print E-mail
Written by Pat Toscano, LS   
Wednesday, 30 June 2004

A 537Kb PDF of this article as it appeared in the magazine—complete with images—is available by clicking HERE

Times continue to be good for browsers of bookstores seeking information on surveying, mapping, exploration, and related biographies. The topics continue to be popular with both academic and mainstream writers. A recent trip to a bookstore not far from my office turned up excellent new titles in the American and European history sections and even more in the science department. But the idea that the current strong interest in our profession might extend to books for younger readers never really occurred to me until Marc Cheves brought The Coast Mappers to my attention.

The Coast Mappers tells of George Davidson, a surveyor and mapmaker for the United States Coast Survey, who is one of many unsung heroes of nineteenth century surveying and mapping in America. Born in 1825 in England, Davidson was seven years old when his father moved the family to Philadelphia in hopes of finding better opportunities for his lace-making business. Davidson attended city schools and eventually went to Philadelphia's Central High School. The school principal at the time was Alexander Dallas Bache, a graduate of West Point who believed in giving the students in his school a strong education in math and science. Bache was later appointed to be the second director of the U.S. Coast Survey and hired his former student, George Davidson, to work for him.

After training in Washington, D.C., Davidson worked on several small Eastern projects. In the late 1840s, while the rush for gold was going strong, he was sent to California to undertake the job of charting the West Coast. It became his life's work.

In spite of heavy ship traffic, sailors arriving at California ports often experienced great hazards due to poor or nonexistent mapping of the coastline. The Gold Rush made it difficult to find available personnel as "gold fever" had taken hold and few people were interested in working for the government. Supplies were expensive and hard to come by. Davidson and his co-workers wound up doing the scientific work and the field work as well.

Author and illustrator Taylor Morrison succinctly but competently tells the story of Davidson's work in California, explaining complex concepts in terms that both adults and younger readers will appreciate and enjoy. He describes the financial troubles, the logistical problems and the hazards of field work on a remote coast. In addition to a well-told story, Morrison has created page after page of beautiful illustrations, both technical and otherwise. If you have ever struggled to explain traversing, control surveys and field mapping to people without mathematical training, then you will be glad to have this book as a sort of training aide. Morrison's images that illustrate latitude and longitude are fabulous. His illustrations of traversing around an island, measuring a baseline and triangulating a coastline are equally good (I would have liked to see an even more detailed explanation of how control nets function as skeletons in holding a map together). All in all, if you have ever done mapping with a plane table you will love Morrison's illustrations.

Davidson had trouble explaining what he was doing wherever he went because his work was completely outside of the experience of most people he encountered. He often received a hostile reception, the most severe of which was from the Makah Indians. The field crew had to build a breastwork around their camp and post a guard to keep watch. Morrison's illustration of naval officers in their gold-trimmed uniforms in the houses of the Indians is excellent.

The Coast Mappers tells about hydrographic surveying and coastal field mapping, describing a method of surveying that is probably gone forever, faded with the remote and wild landscape that was once the West Coast. The book is both entertaining and educational. The acknowledgments and bibliography at the end reveal Morrison's inspiration for writing the book, as well as his in-depth research on the subject. A glossary of important terms is also provided. Blending careful details with a rich play of colors and light, Morrison's illustrations capture the intangible elements of the coast mappers' work. They seem to reveal why, in spite of the hardships, the "adventuresome" were so attracted to the work.

Editor's Note: The Coast Mappers is available on our website at www.theamericansurveyor.com. For information about other books by Taylor Morrison, visit his website at www.taylormorrison.com. We also want to congratulate Taylor and Naomi Morrison on the birth of their first child, David Carter Morrison, who was born in May!

Patrick Toscano is the City Surveyor for the City of New Britain, Connecticut. He has taught surveying classes since 1988, and is an adjunct faculty member at Central Connecticut State University in New Britain, and at Capital Community College in Hartford.

Sidebars:
"In the observatory, wisps of smoke puffed out of small oil lanterns that illuminated the telescope sights. The surveyors recorded when and where certain stars appeared and compared their information with tables made at the observatory in Greenwich, England. They listed the times and positions of stars passing overhead in the night sky. Rockwell noted the time and called out, "Up!" when a star was going to appear in Davidson's telescope. Their frame of reference was an infinitely huge imaginary ball surrounding the earth, called the celestial sphere. The stars were moving across its surface like trains on tracks. By using the star map in the sky, the surveyors could determine their location on earth." (p. 15)

"...Harrison had to create an accurate picture of the giant cape. This was extremely difficult to do in 1851, long before aerial photography was available. Harrison hiked over the steep cliffs, mapping the terrain with a drawing board called a plane table. A rod man hiked ahead of him to a distant point and then held up a stadia rod. Harrison found out how far away the rod was by reading measurements from it through a small telescope on the table, called an alidade. Next, he determined the direction to the rod by drawing a line along the ruler on the alidade from the rod man's point to his point on the table. When they finished at that point, the rod man hiked to a new spot and Harrison followed him. They ran a traverse, or measured lines across the cape, to record the distance, direction, and height between many points. As the surveyors repeated this process from point to point, the headland began to take shape on the thick cloth paper. "The map grew as Harrison [a topographer] sketched all the land he could see. The plane-table party completed the traverse when they returned to the first point. They had to move quickly, because the paper got soggy when it was in the field for too long." (p. 23)

A 537Kb PDF of this article as it appeared in the magazine—complete with images—is available by clicking HERE

 
< Prev   Next >

Featured Amerisurv Events
List Your Event Here
please
contact Amerisurv
2008 ESRI Survey & Engineering GIS Summit - August 2-5, San Diego, California. Join more than 400 surveyors and engineers in exploring the possibilities of GIS technology. See how GIS software integrates with surveying and engineering tools to provide more complete business solutions and field processes.

Surveyors Review Course, Campus of Missouri University of Science and Technology (MS&T) - August 19-22, 2008, Rolla, Missouri

15th Annual GeoTech - October 7-8,  2008, NOAA’s Auditorium and Science Center in Silver Spring, MD. Hosted by Potomac Region of the American Society of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing and co-hosted by the NGS, 1 day of Workshops taught by experts, and 1 day of Technical sessions.,  

27th Annual International Submerged Lands Management Conference - October 26-29, 2008, Traverse City, Michigan. For managers, regulators and practitioners whose work affects or is affected by submerged lands management.

California Land Surveyors Association 2009 Conference - March 28-April 1, 2009, Hilton San Diego Resort (Mission Bay). This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it , (707) 578-6016.

SPAR 2009 - March 30- April 1, 2009, Hyatt Regency Hotel, Denver, Colorado. SPAR 2009 will focus on best practices for using 3D imaging technologies to design and deliver capital projects as well as operate, modify and maintain production, manufacturing and infrastructure assets.


Share This Item

del.icio.us / Furl/ digg this item!Digg / Slashdot / Y!MyWeb / reddit / newsvine  addtoany
Share on Facebook
Google
 
AMERISURV TOP NEWS


Are you getting our e-newsletter?
Sign up and check out the archives HERE


GOT NEWS? Send To:
submit press

News Feeds

 
Subscribe to Amerisurv news & updates via RSS or get our Feedburn
xml feed

Sponsor


Historic Maps
Careers

post a job
Reach our audience of Professional land surveyors and Geo-Technology professionals with your career ad. Feel free to contact us if you need additional information.

 

RSS Feed Options
add to my yahoo!
add to newsgator
add to my AOL
add to bloglines
add to netvibes
add to my google
view with HubDog
technorati
xml feedView Feed XML
 
Need help implementing RSS?
Read this fine tutorial

Add to my Widsets
Amerisurv Mobile



The American Surveyor ©2003 - 2007 All rights reserved / Privacy Statement