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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
Discusses 'bono fide rights' and riparian boundaries in the PLSS. Presents the non-rectangular entities, the process for section subdivision, including normal, fractional, lotted closing corners, and sections lotted for irregularities found in a dependent survey, and the proper use of off-line closing corners. Prerequisite: CE 2080.
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3.00 Credits
Covers the basic concepts of geographic information systems, the methods and software used to implement them, and their applications to surveying and analysis of other surveying problems. Prerequisites: ES 1060 or 1061 and either CE 2070 or CE 2072.
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1.00 Credits
Covers the importance of and process for records research. Discussion leads into the analysis of corner evidence on the ground, and restoring lost corners after years of deterioration and neglect. Also discusses the role of the present day surveyor in the PLSS and what types of complexities that will be faced. Prerequisite: CE 2082.
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3.00 Credits
Basic fundamentals of the Public Land Survey System (PLSS), dependent and independent resurveys, survey plats, "bono fide rights", riparian boundaries, non-rectangular entities, corner evidence and the role of the modern day surveyor. Prerequisite: CE 2070 or equivalent.
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3.00 Credits
Advanced topics in situations and problems in the Public Land Survey system, with discussion of major court cases involving everyday applications to surveyors. 1975 BLM casebook and other sources of survey reference. Prerequisite: CE 2085 and CE 3740.
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2.00 Credits
Historical and current issues for land description writing and usage for the practicing surveyor. Relationship between written descriptions and field survey data, interpreting old descriptions and the structure principles of description. Prerequisite: CE 2070.
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2.00 Credits
he history of geodesy including measurement techniques, coordinate systems, ellipsoids, and datums is reviewed. The modern geodetic and Cartesian coordinates systems, as well as the differences between grid and ground coordinates systems, and the current geodetic and Cartesian coordinate systems available today are discussed. Prerequisites: none.
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4.00 Credits
rom fundamental theory to practical application and advanced technologies, this class covers all aspects of GPS needed to understand and use GPS as a land surveyor including the basics of GPS technology, common hardware, surveying methods, survey design, planning and observing, real-time kinematics and DGPS. Prerequisite: CE 2089.
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3.00 Credits
The practice of civil engineering is used as a model to introduce how the different areas of civil engineering are interested. Uses examples from several civil engineering projects to introduce computer-aided drafting and design. Prerequisites: CE 2070 and ES 2110.
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3.00 Credits
Students will apply professional skills such as project management, engineering economics, professional ethics, and sustainability to an integrated design project. The role of permitting, regulations, and professional codes to design problems will also be explored. Cross listed with ARE 3000. Prerequisites: ARE/CE 2000 and ES 2410.
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