Home Our Team Services Contact Us Free Estimate Other Links
We hope that this website is interesting and useful to you.
If you spend a little time here, we hope that you will learn a little about surveying and become familiar with our company.
Definition of Surveying
All of the
following is attributable to Dr. Ben Buckner [Dec'94]:
ELEMENTARY DEFINITION OF SURVEYING (as paraphrased in most texts):
The art, science, and technology of detecting the relative position of points
at, above, or below the surface of the earth; or establishing such points.
BROADER DEFINITION (according to its true nature and scope)
Surveying Measurement:
The art, science, and technology of gathering and analyzing measurement data
related to the land and other land-related surfaces and spaces, to include
designing and devising the measurement specifications and standards to
accomplish these measurements with the desired precision and accuracy and error
control and adjustment, including the use of all instrumentation applicable to
such measurements, said measurements typically being, but not limited to
distances, heights, angles, directions, positions, areas, volumes, and other
measurements associated with these quantities.
Professional Surveying:
The application of knowledge of the science of surveying measurement, the legal
principles of boundary location, the laws related to boundaries and land use,
the applicable mathematical and computational theories and principles, the
natural and other forces which affect positional accuracy, the land planning and
development concepts pertinent to subdivision of land and property surveys, land
record and land tenure concepts, geodetic and other earth-related sciences to
the analysis, design, and execution of surveying and mapping projects and the
design of land mapping and information systems.
THE VALUE OF BEING A SURVEYOR:
Full understanding of the inexactness, uncertainty, and variable nature of
measurement leads to humility since it teaches that one can never be sure of
results. It is this very humility that, more than anything, creates the
professional attitude needed to constantly seek new evidence, and consequently a
higher probability of approaching the truth or proving something with
confidence.
The surveyor is primarily an analyst. As an analyst of both measurement data and
boundary location evidence (including geometric and other mathematical
relationships) the surveyor is in a position to develop a keen sensitivity to
the importance of finding and applying the truth.
A surveyor, when practicing according to the true nature of surveying, is ever
seeking the truth, whether in measurement or in boundary location. Consequently,
learning and applying the measurement science and the legal and other principles
of boundary retracement develops character.
The art and science of surveying is a mirror of life itself.