A Treatise on Practical Surveying: Which is Demonstrated from Its First Principles. Wherein Everything that is Useful and Curious in that Art, is Fully Considered and ExplainedF. Lucas and Joseph Cushing, 1818 - 478 sider |
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Side 140
... bearings of lines ; which will be particularly shewn , when we come to treat of them . PROB . I. fig . 88 . B Let A and B be two houses on one side of a river , whose distance asunder is 293 perches : there is a tower at C on the other ...
... bearings of lines ; which will be particularly shewn , when we come to treat of them . PROB . I. fig . 88 . B Let A and B be two houses on one side of a river , whose distance asunder is 293 perches : there is a tower at C on the other ...
Side 169
... bearing of the first stationary line AB , let the line be measured , and the length thereof in chains and links be ... bearings and stationary distances . Having done with your first station , set the instru- ment over the hole or spot ...
... bearing of the first stationary line AB , let the line be measured , and the length thereof in chains and links be ... bearings and stationary distances . Having done with your first station , set the instru- ment over the hole or spot ...
Side 171
... and a fore - sight to E ; thus the bearings may be taken quite round , and the stationary distances being annexed to them , will complete the field - book . But in this last method , care must be taken OF THE CIRCUMFERENTOR . 171.
... and a fore - sight to E ; thus the bearings may be taken quite round , and the stationary distances being annexed to them , will complete the field - book . But in this last method , care must be taken OF THE CIRCUMFERENTOR . 171.
Side 173
... bearings , as before ; the difference of these bearings , if less than 180 , will be the quantity of degrees contained in the given an- gle ; but if more , take it from 360 , and the remainder will be the degrees contained in the given ...
... bearings , as before ; the difference of these bearings , if less than 180 , will be the quantity of degrees contained in the given an- gle ; but if more , take it from 360 , and the remainder will be the degrees contained in the given ...
Side 174
... either give the angles of the field , or the bearing of every stationary distance line , from the meridian ; as the circunferentor and quarter- First then , To take the angles of the field ed compass do . 174 OF THE THEODOLITE .
... either give the angles of the field , or the bearing of every stationary distance line , from the meridian ; as the circunferentor and quarter- First then , To take the angles of the field ed compass do . 174 OF THE THEODOLITE .
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
40 perches ABCD acres altitude Answer base bearing blank line centre chains and links chord circle circumferentor Co-secant Secant Co-sine Co-tang column compass complement contained cyphers decimal decimal fraction Dep Lat difference Dist divided divisor draw east edge EXAMPLE feet field-book figures four-pole chains half the sum height Hence hypothenuse inches instrument Lat Dep latitude length logarithm measure meridian distance multiplied needle number of degrees object off-sets parallel parallelogram perpendicular piece of ground plane pole polygon Portmarnock PROB proportion protractor quotient radius right angles right line scale of equal SCHOLIUM second station sect semicircle side sights sine square root stationary distance stationary line sun's suppose survey taken Tang thence theo theodolite THEOREM thro triangle ABC trigonometry true azimuth two-pole chains vane variation
Populære avsnitt
Side 42 - The angle in a semicircle is a right angle ; the angle in a segment greater than a semicircle is less than a right angle ; and the angle in a segment less than a semicircle is greater than a right angle.
Side 99 - ... on a side, denotes its length to be given in feet, yards, perches, or miles, &c. and this mark", either in an angle or on a side, denotes the angle or side to be required. ; From these proportions it may be observed ; that to find a side, when the angles and one side are given, any side may be made the radius; and to find an angle, one of the given sides must be made the radius. So that in the 1st, 2d, and 3d cases, any side as well required as given may be made the radius, and in the first statings...
Side 46 - Triangles upon equal bases, and between the same parallels, are equal to one another.
Side 93 - The circumference of every circle is supposed to be divided into 360 equal parts, called degrees ; and each degree into 60 equal parts, called minutes ; and each minute into 60 equal parts, called seconds ; and these into thirds, &c.
Side 114 - C' (89) (90) (91) (92) (93) 112. In any plane triangle, the sum of any two sides is to their difference as the tangent of half the sum of the opposite angles is to the tangent of half their difference.
Side 4 - POMEROY, of the said District, hath deposited in this Office the title of a Book, the right whereof he claims as Proprietor, in the words following, to wit : . . "Biography of the Signers to the Declaration of Independence.
Side 48 - The hypothenuse of a right-angled triangle may be found by having the other two sides ; thus, the square root of the sum of the squares of the base and perpendicular, will be the hypothenuse. Cor. 2. Having the hypothenuse and one side given to find the other; the square root of the difference of the squares of the hypothenuse and given side will be the required side.
Side 115 - TO THEIR DIFFERENCE ; So IS THE TANGENT OF HALF THE SUM OF THE OPPOSITE ANGLES', To THE TANGENT OF HALF THEIR DIFFERENCE.
Side 175 - ... the two cardinal points of your compass the point of the needle lies between (the north, south, east, and west being called the four cardinal points, and are graved on the bottom of the box), putting down those points together by their initial letters, and thereto annexing the number of degrees, counting from the north or south, as before, thus ; if the point of your needle lies between the north and east, north and west, south and east, or south and west points in the bottom of the box, then...
Side 282 - But if one corner cannot be seen from the other, run the line according to the given bearing, and observe the nearest distance between the line so run and the corner: then...