Jump to content

Can someone translate this?


Seth!

Recommended Posts

Posted

Okay, I need some help here. This is the info in question:

quote:

THE STATION IS LOCATED ON THE S SIDE OF THE INLET ON A SANDY POINT ABOUT 1 MILE W OF CHURCH LIGHT. THERE IS A SMALL BIGHT JUST E OF THE STATION. IT IS 16 FEET OUTSIDE OF HIGH-WATER LINE AND COVERS ABOUT 3 FEET AT HIGH WATER. IT PROJECTS 3 INCHES ABOVE THE SURFACE.

 

SURFACE, UNDERGROUND, AND REFERENCE MARKS NO.1 AND NO.2 ARE STANDARD BRONZE DISKS SET IN CONCRETE, AS DESCRIBED IN NOTES 1A, 7A, AND 11A.

 

REFERENCE MARK NO.1 IS SET W OF THE STATION ABOUT 18 FEET OUTSIDE OF THE HIGH-WATER LINE. IT PROJECTS ABOUT 3 INCHES ABOVE THE LEVEL

BEACH.

 

MARK NO.2 IS SET INSHORE FROM THE STATION ABOUT 8 FEET BACK OF THE HIGH-WATER LINE. IT PROJECTS ABOUT 3 INCHES ABOVE THE SURFACE.


So it sounds like we have three different things here: Reference Marks 1 and 2--which are bronze disks--and "the station". What is the station? I thought that the bronze disk WAS the station.

 

Also, is there any way to know which disk is #1 and which is #2--other than very accurate coordinates?

 

- Seth!

Posted

Sounds as if "the Station" has two Azimuths assigned to it. Two pointers, if you will, that each point to the main marker, possibly a triangulation disk.

 

The Azimuth markers are normally assigned numbers as ID, marks # 1 and # 2, and they have arrows pointing to the general direction of the main "station".

 

It's a little confusing at 1st... Go to the benchmark photo section and check out the pics posted there. You'll find a world of information in the photos alone.

 

icon_smile.gif

 

~Honest Value Never Fails~

Posted

Sounds as if "the Station" has two Azimuths assigned to it. Two pointers, if you will, that each point to the main marker, possibly a triangulation disk.

 

The Azimuth markers are normally assigned numbers as ID, marks # 1 and # 2, and they have arrows pointing to the general direction of the main "station".

 

It's a little confusing at 1st... Go to the benchmark photo section and check out the pics posted there. You'll find a world of information in the photos alone.

 

icon_smile.gif

 

~Honest Value Never Fails~

Posted

Without knowing the PID and not seeing the original datasheet. RM's are usually stamped RM1, RM2, or whatever designation the datasheet specifies. The "station" is probably also a bronze disk. If you post the PID I will take a look at the datasheet and try and be a little more specific.

Posted

Ah, I get it. What I found was a reference marker. In 1948, they could not find it. Apparently the actual station and the other reference marker were destroyed. The PID is SY1755. Here is what I found:

 

NGS_marker.jpg

 

- Seth!

Posted

Here is how the station is descibed:

quote:
IT IS 16 FEET OUTSIDE OF HIGH-WATER LINE AND COVERS ABOUT 3 FEET AT HIGH WATER. IT PROJECTS 3 INCHES ABOVE THE SURFACE. SURFACE, UNDERGROUND, AND REFERENCE MARKS NO.1 AND NO.2 ARE STANDARD BRONZE DISKS SET IN CONCRETE...

Can anyone make sense of those first two sentences? "outside of high-water line"? Does that mean at high-tide, the station is 16 feet away from the shore, in the water? Or 16 feet from the water's edge? Or something else? How about "covers about 3 feet at high water"? I can't even guess what that means.

 

- Seth!

Posted

The mark is 16 foot outside, towards the water, of the high tide mark and at high tide the mark is in 3 foot of water.

 

Are these guys/gals precise or what? It reminds me of Biblical parables.... You know, open for interpretation.

 

icon_smile.gif

 

~Honest Value Never Fails~

Posted

The mark is 16 foot outside, towards the water, of the high tide mark and at high tide the mark is in 3 foot of water.

 

Are these guys/gals precise or what? It reminds me of Biblical parables.... You know, open for interpretation.

 

icon_smile.gif

 

~Honest Value Never Fails~

Posted

I agree with Dawgies.

 

Wading through the poor description, I would guess that the benchmark is in a tidal area, being outside the high water mark (most of us live inside coastal high-water marks; the U.S. is a bit larger when it's low tide on both coasts icon_razz.gif). The benchmark is covered by 3 feet of water at mean high tide, so it's 3 feet (minus 3 inches) lower than the high water mark and 16 feet offshore from it.

 

Also, from the description of Ref. Mark #2, "inshore ... and back of high water line" is apparently the opposite side of the high water line from "outside of the high water line".

 

If monuments were found lying on the beach, no doubt the main station and RM 1 are long gone.

Posted

I agree with Dawgies.

 

Wading through the poor description, I would guess that the benchmark is in a tidal area, being outside the high water mark (most of us live inside coastal high-water marks; the U.S. is a bit larger when it's low tide on both coasts icon_razz.gif). The benchmark is covered by 3 feet of water at mean high tide, so it's 3 feet (minus 3 inches) lower than the high water mark and 16 feet offshore from it.

 

Also, from the description of Ref. Mark #2, "inshore ... and back of high water line" is apparently the opposite side of the high water line from "outside of the high water line".

 

If monuments were found lying on the beach, no doubt the main station and RM 1 are long gone.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...