A 434Kb PDF of this article as it appeared in the magazine—complete with images—is available by clicking HERE
After a rough wagon ride up to Pikes Peak in 1893, it was the view from the top that inspired Katharine Lee Bates to write a poem that became known as "America the Beautiful." Later set to music by Samuel Ward, its images have become part of our national conscience. Few there are who cannot sing at least one stanza of the four. It's no secret to surveyors that many of us chose this profession because it allows us to work outside--amidst those spacious skies, amber waves of grain, and purple mountain majesties. What a marvelous career path!
Like many of you, I enjoy the stories surveyors tell about challenging jobs and unusual circumstances. This month's cover story by Daryl Moistner seemed a fitting tribute to modern technology, the pioneering spirit of surveyors, and the rugged beauty of the land that holds their footsteps. Who among us wouldn't love to ride a helicopter to work in pristine, untrammeled areas? Of course, his tales of Alaskan mosquitoes are enough to dampen my ardor these days, but probably wouldn't have when I was younger...
A native of the UK, Moistner is perhaps one of the best surveyor/photographers in the U.S. One of his photographs was selected as the cover art for the new BLM Manual (see pic below). On the next page is a photo that didn't make it into the article due to space limitations, but is nonetheless one that will resonate with surveyors. The fisherman in the photo is helicopter pilot Mark Shelton, who was part of the work crew. It's not often that one gets the opportunity to go fishing while working! (The situation reminded me of a conversation I once had with one of our party chiefs. When I inquired about the pillow and basketball he kept in the back of the work truck, he vigorously defended his right to take a nap or shoot a few hoops on his lunch break. It was a chin-stroking moment for me...) For more of Moistner's great photos from various locations, check out his website, www.nevadasurveyor.com.
Creating Capital in Developing Countries
At the ESRI User Conference in 2002, Kari Mikkonen, a GIS Specialist at the Finland-based consulting company Soil and Water Ltd., gave a presentation about a project his company had worked on in Palestine. Even though the people living there knew where their property was, because land titles didn't exist, the property owners were unable to borrow against their property. Because of this, a formal banking system didn't exist, something that is vital for creating businesses and growing economies. As a surveyor, I remember wincing when Kari mentioned that they were using photogrammetry to establish the cadastre, but he went on to say that on-site visits involving all the adjoiners allowed the interested parties to agree as to where the property boundaries were. In other words, these people knew what they owned even if they didn't have a piece of paper to prove it. Once they received the title to their property, they could leverage that into economic opportunities.
At last year's User Conference, one of the keynotes--Mapping the Invisible-- was made by Hernando de Soto, the world-famous Peruvian economist. De Soto has championed cadastral systems and land administration systems in the developing world as a means of lifting people from poverty. His book, The Mystery of Capital, details how, without written land ownership, the cycle of poverty cannot be broken. I highly recommend de Soto's keynote, which can be watched here: http://www.esri. com/events/uc/agenda/plenary.html.
In this issue Peter Rabley, of International Land Systems in Maryland, writes a heartwarming story about one such experience in Ghana. One image in particular jumped out at me: the office in which the land ownership records are kept. As surveyors who deal with records-keeping, I'm sure many of you will be able to relate to the image, realizing that digitization is the only way to deal with increasing amounts of information. And as an aside, I have repeatedly said that surveyors need to move towards being the purveyors of information. I hope you'll take the time to read the article and view the de Soto video.
Looking Ahead
2009 marked a dismal construction economy. In talking with surveyors across the country, some "have a little work," and most don't have any backlog, but the doors are still open. Here's hoping that things will pick up in 2010, and you'll be able to continue doing what you love doing.
A 434Kb PDF of this article as it appeared in the magazine—complete with images—is available by clicking HERE
Editorial: Maps as a Metaphor
"I know this world is ruled by infinite intelligence. Everything that surrounds us--everything that exists--proves that there are infinite laws behind it. There can be no denying this fact. It is mathematical in its precision." There are many surveyors and mappers and members of the precision community who concur with these words of Thomas Edison. Economy, too, hangs on immutable laws. One of the .... Read the Article
Measuring a Caribbean Disaster
On January 12, 2010, a magnitude 7.0 earthquake struck the city of Port-au-Prince, the capital and largest city of Haiti. Tens of thousands of buildings collapsed, and more than 200,000 people died in the disaster. Earthquakes are not unexpected in Haiti. The country sits astride several fault lines, among them the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden fault .... Read the Article
3D-Laser Scanning and Surveying Collide
LandAir Surveying started business in 1988 performing site surveys and topographic surveys for contractors in Georgia and surrounding states with two survey crews and a total staff of less than 10. By 1998 the firm expanded to surveying cell tower sites for the telecommunications industry (more than 3,000 sites in four years) using ... Read the Article
Another Triumph!
He's done it again. Javad Ashjaee has released an impressive state-of-the-art product that enables surveyors to expand their GNSS capabilities. On June 29, 2010 Javad unveiled the Triumph VS at the company's 40,000 square foot newly designed headquarters and JAVAD EMS boardmanufacturing facility in San Jose, California. Over the decades ... Read the Article
Product Review: Hemisphere GPS R220
One of the recent trends in precision GPS manufacturing is the enclosed, fully integrated receiver. This is no doubt in response to market demands by surveyors in the field for gear that offers more durability and less complexity in setting up and getting to work. This trend has certainly offered surveyors many benefits, however, it has also ushered in a few limitations. For instance, many of these ... Read the Article
Comprehensive Collection
Recording the location, dimensions and physical attributes of every piece of equipment constituting rural utilities throughout the United States might seem like a tall order. But information tools used to build a GIS have advanced so much in recent years that the endeavor is not only possible, but plausible. Great Falls, Montana-based GeoNav Group International, Inc. recently acquired the technology to pull .... Read the Article
Feedback
Doing a Proper Job: I have a better reason for the legal profession insisting on a metes and bounds descriptions for dependent resurveys than clerk mentality or ancient check lists. In his article "Rewriting Legal Descriptions" [Vol. 7, Num. 4], Gary Kent's example of "the most egregious example of description rewriting is the preparation of a metes and bound description for a property that is a lot in ... Read the Comments
Vantage Point: "Just" What?
Several months ago my husband and I were working on a rail to trail conversion in our neighborhood, digging out debris and planting trees. At one point I was separating the junk found in the digging process from the recyclable beer cans and glass bottles when someone walked up and started talking to me. With my head still down, in the midst of trying to subdue a long strand of barbed wire into a ... Read the Article
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