Title: Field Note Seminar Session 2
1Field Note SeminarSession 2
2BULLETIN 38
- It is stated on page vi that this is to be used
as a guide to monuments placed between the years
of 1871 to 1917. - Bulletin 38 is essential for properly restoring
monuments. - As well the guide should be used to aide in
recognizing secondary evidence.
3Using Bulletin 38 as a guide
- The index is listed in table form on page vii.
- By the time the township subdivision surveys
reached the central and northern parts of the
Province the style of monument had been basically
settled on. - By 1915 four pits and a mound with the iron post
at the north corner of the mound had become the
standard. - To save on iron posts many or most quarter
corners used wooden posts. -
4Key Eras for Bulletin 38
5- Early on it was discovered that on the open
prairie wind had a tendency to move dirt from a
mound back into the pits, so the dirt was
scattered to prevent this. - Different pit sizes and configurations were used.
(See Bulletin 38). - For a time a very thin iron post with a flattened
top a a square metal plate held in place by a pin
or wire was used. The plate was stamped with the
location.
6- When neither iron posts nor wood was available,
quarter section corners were often marked with
only pits or pits and a mound in the bush. - By the time the township subdivision surveys
reached the central and northern parts of the
Province the style of monument had been basically
settled on. - By 1915 four pits and a mound with the iron post
at the north corner of the mound had become the
standard. - To save on iron posts many or most quarter
corners used wooden posts.
7- Of course there were variations as mounds were
not always constructed, in which case the iron
post was placed at the point where lines through
the centers of the four pits would intersect. - At Township corners (NE 36 SE 1 on Correction
Lines) a much larger iron post was often used.
(50mm square top and 1.5m long)
8Section Corners
All pits were 1 ½ feet deep. All mounds were 2 ½
feet high If a mound was constructed the iron
post was placed at the north corner of the
mound. If no mound was constructed the iron post
was placed at the mid point between the 4 pits.
9Correction lines
10Monuments After 1915Section Corners
All mounds, pits and trenches are of the same
dimensions, whether they indicate township,
section, quarter section or any other
corners. The center of each of the four pits is 7
feet from the post, which is in the center of the
square formed by the pits. All pits are 1 ½ feet
deep, all mounds are 2 ½ feet high. The center of
the mound is 10 feet south of the post if
constructed.
11Witness Monuments
A witness trench is circular, of 6 feet inside
diameter. The trench proper is 2 feet wide and 1
foot deep. A witness mound is conical, 6 feet in
diameter and 2 ½ feet high. A witness posts
stands in the center of the circle formed by the
trench. The center of the mound is on the line
surveyed, and at a distance of 10 feet from the
post in the direction opposite the corner being
witnessed.
12Correction Lines
All pits are 1 ½ feet deep, all mounds are 2 ½
feet high. General Principal Place the mound on
the lands which it is intended to mark.
13Primary evidence after 1915
- Three Major changes Introduced
- Mound moved outside of the pits
- Standard Posts (Brass cap on pipe with base
plate) used. (P. Pit M) - All blind lines surveyed and monumented.
14Monuments At PresentSection Corners
Mp. Denotes Alberta marker post 6 feet in length
with an aluminium plaque (6 X 2.25) attached.
The markings on the plaque read Alberta Survey
Marker Do not Remove. Marker posts are set
firmly in the ground on the section line at a
uniform distance of 0.3 meters on both sides of
the standard post. In no case shall the marker
posts be placed within the government road
allowance.
15¼ Section Corner (N ¼)
Standard post denotes a brass tablet which is 8
centimetres in diameter marked with a crown and
the words Province of Alberta and mounted on a
base approved by the Director of Surveys.
16Correction Line
17Something to keep in mind.
- Because many prairie corners did not have mounds,
or the placed monument was sometimes in the
center of the mound, most fences were constructed
starting at the center of the mound, or the
center of the four pits. - Many settlers carried this thought North and
constructed their fences from the center of the
mound not realizing that the iron post was
actually some 3.53 or 1.08m further north. - Keep this in mind. If a proportioned distance
falls 1m north of a fence corner maybe that is in
fact the correct location because the fence was
originally built from the center of the mound and
not the iron post.
18Something to keep in mind.
- There have been cases where the iron post which
should be at the north corner of the mound has
been moved to the center of the mound by someone.
(Perhaps a landowner). - Always confirm that the iron post is in fact in
the correct position relative to the pits and
mound.
19How Roman Numerals Work
- First the letters and their respective values
- I 1 (one)
- V 5 (five)
- X 10 (ten)
- L 50 (fifty)
- C 100 (one hundred)
- D 500 (five hundred)
- M 1000 (one thousand)
20- The letters should be arranged with the largest
value to the one with the smallest value. Each
letters value is added to the previous one. - Only powers of ten ( I, X, C, M) may be repeated.
A letter may not be repeated more than three
times in a row. - Due to this rule, certain numbers are written
using subtraction. With this the letter having
the smaller value is subtracted from the one with
the larger value. The remainder is then added to
the rest of the letters. For this again there are
rules - Only powers of ten ( I, X, C, M) may be
subtracted. - The smaller letter must be 1/5 or 1/10 the larger
one.
21Examples of Roman Numerals
- SEC 20 TWP 35 RGE 21 W4M, the original post would
be marked XX, XXXV, XX1, no meridian is marked
on the post. - SEC 25 TWP 71 RGE 30 W5M, the original post would
be marked XXV, LXXI, XXX - How would you write out the following?
- SEC 18 TWP 66 RGE 27 W4M?
22Exercise Bulletin 38
- Find Plan of Township 35, Range 21, west of the
Fourth Meridian - The following exercise will use bulletin 38 and
the township plat to identify the types of
monuments you would expect to find.
23(No Transcript)
24What would you expect to find at the NE of
section 36 had nothing been disturbed?
25What would you expect to find at the N1/4 of
section 29 had nothing been disturbed?
26What would you expect to find at the E 1/4of
section 10 had nothing been disturbed.
27Make a sketch of the monument you would expect to
find at the SE of section 6 had nothing been
disturbed.
28Make a sketch of the monument you would expect to
find at the NE of section 20 had nothing been
disturbed, what year was this monument erected?
29Make a sketch of the monument you would expect to
find at the SE of section 1, what year was this
monument erected?
30Make a sketch of the monument you would expect to
find at the NE of section 33, what year was this
monument erected?