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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Presents elements of boundary control and legal principles. Course topics include boundary history, ownership, rights, interests, title, transfer, description of real property, the rectangular system, sequential conveyances, simultaneously created boundaries and water boundary elements.
Prerequisite:
WRTG A212 UA C AND GEO A156 UA C
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to fundamentals concepts, including physical planning, transportation, housing, land use, urban development and preservation. Population movement to cities and suburbs; rural depopulation. Regional growth and development. Political and economic development drivers. History, theory and ethics of planning. Virtual environments. GIS and support tools for planning decisions. Registration Restrictions: Junior or senior standing.
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3.00 Credits
Presents concepts governing land development. Examines analysis of soil, topography, geometry, environmental impact, aesthetic and economic principles in land planning. Discusses the permitting process and federal, state and municipality platting regulations. Covers automated subdivision design and platting and ethical considerations when developing land.
Prerequisite:
GEO A157 UA C AND GEO A267 UA C
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3.00 Credits
Outlines principles of optics, image formation and lens distortions. Introduces aerial and terrestrial cameras, close-range photogrammetry, stereoscopic image acquisition and measurements, 3D model reconstruction, and aerial photogrammetry.
Prerequisite:
GEO A246 UA C AND GIS A351 UA C
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to geometrical and physical geodesy. Examines computations on the ellipsoid, elements of datums, map projections and state plane coordinate systems.
Prerequisite:
GEO A246 UA C
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3.00 Credits
Examines fundamental concepts of statistical error analysis with applications to surveying measurements. Covers fundamental properties of data sets, including measures of central tendency, measures of data variation, sampling distribution theory, statistical confidence intervals and testing, and propagation of variance. Introduces least squares adjustment.
Prerequisite:
GEO A246 UA C AND STAT A253 UA C
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3.00 Credits
Presents the theory and mechanics of least squares adjustment using the traditional surveying observations of distances, angles, azimuths and elevation differences. Covers post-adjustment analysis through the use of various statistical tests and error ellipse computation and analysis. Examines least squares adjustment and analysis of differential leveling, triangulations, trilateration, traverse and network observations.
Prerequisite:
GEO A364 UA C
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3.00 Credits
Discusses the United States Public Land Survey System with emphasis on Alaska: sectionalized land subdivision, corner restoration, resurveys, evidence, sources for legal research, and current BLM procedures and regulations.
Prerequisite:
GEO A267 UA C
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3.00 Credits
Introduces principles of high-density surveying, outlines theory and practice of collection and processing of high-density spatial data (point clouds). Covers the use of automated photogrammetric and structure from motion (SFM) techniques, airborne LiDAR, terrestrial and mobile laser scanners.
Prerequisite:
GEO A357 UA C
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3.00 Credits
Introduces principles of point cloud data analysis for geospatial applications. Outlines theory and practice of processing of point clouds, generated from automated photogrammetric and structure from motion (SFM) techniques, airborne LiDAR, terrestrial and mobile laser scanners. Covers theoretical and practical aspects of high-density spatial data analysis including classification of LiDAR data, point cloud fusion, surface generation, shape fitting, and feature extraction.
Prerequisite:
GEO A410 UA C AND GIS A301 UA C
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