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TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P. (130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering, Visnagar
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TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING

Patel Dixit K. (130400106054)

Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051)

Civil Engineering departmentSankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Visnagar

Page 2: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Basic ideas

• Surveying - the creation of a scale representation of the ground surface - is a basic activity in many areas of environmental management.

• A survey will be one of of two types:

– Primary survey - to establish the position of objects in three dimensions when no previous information exists

– Secondary survey - to add extra information to existing data or to measure changes over an interval of time

Page 3: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Basic ideas

• The task of three dimensional position fixing is normally broken into two parts:

Determining plan position

Determining elevation

Page 4: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Basic ideas

• Each of these determinations may be either: absolute - made in terms of a fixed co-ordinate

system

relative - made in terms of local co-ordinates which may later be converted to absolute co-ordinates if required.

• The majority of surveys carried out for environmental management are thus secondary relative surveys

Page 5: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Plan Position Fixing

• The plan position of a station can be established in a number of ways:

Page 6: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

By reference to the apparent positions of astronomical objects when viewed from that station

• This method gives the absolute location of the station in terms of latitude and longitude, which can be converted to local systems such as the National Grid.

Page 7: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

By the measurement of the angles between lines of sight to the unknown station from other known positions

By the intersection of lines of sight from the unknown station to other objects whose positions are already known

• These two methods both rely on the simple Euclidean geometry of the plane. (Hence the term plane surveying). The first procedure is termed triangulation and the second resection.

Page 8: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

BaselineA B

The basic principle of triangulation

Measured angle Measured angle

Page 9: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Unknown position

The basic principle of resection

Measuredangle

Measuredangle

Known position

Known positionKnown position

Measuredangle

Page 10: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

By measurement of distances between the unknown station and other objects of known positions

• This last method includes a number of particular cases:

Page 11: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

measurements of offset distances from a base line.

trilateration - the distance equivalent of triangulation.

tacheometry - an optical method of distance measurement along a known bearing

Page 12: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

BaselineA B

The basic principle of trilateration

Measured sideMeasured side

Page 13: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Plane Surveying: Theory

• Plane surveying relies on the basic concepts of Euclidean geometry, and in particular the properties of triangles.

• The most important (for our purposes) of these are:

Page 14: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Plane Surveying: Theory

The internal angles of a triangle sum to 180 The sides of an equilateral triangle are equal

and the internal angles are all 60°

The base angles and opposing sides of an isosceles triangle are equal

Page 15: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

60º

60º 60º

The equilateral triangleAll sides equal in lengthAll angles equal (= 60º)

Page 16: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

The isosceles triangleTwo sides equal in lengthTwo angles equal

a a

Page 17: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Plane Surveying: Theory

If the respective angles in two triangles are equal then the triangles are similar and their sides are all in the same proportion

If two triangles have two angles and one side equal (or vice versa) then they are congruent and all their other respective angles and sides are equal.

Two triangles are also congruent if all their sides are equal.

Page 18: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Similar triangles have corresponding angles equalbut are of differing size

Page 19: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Conguent triangles are identical

• two angles and one side equal• two sides and one angle equal• all three sides equal

Page 20: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Plane Surveying: Theory

• Congruent triangles are unique - you cannot draw two different triangles from the same set of measurements

• This means that a complete set of survey data must define the positions of objects uniquely.

Page 21: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Plane Surveying: Theory

Any closed polygon can be subdivided into a series of contiguous triangles

• These properties are repeatedly used in the procedure of triangulation in which stations are surveyed in a pattern of contiguous triangles.

Page 22: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Any closed polygon can be subdivided into contiguous triangles

These should be chosen to make as many of the triangles asclose to equilateral as possible

Page 23: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Plane surveying: practical aspects

• In practice, most plane surveys are carried out in a straightforward way following an established sequence:

1. A reconnaisance survey will establish the dimensions of the area, relative levels, significant features, accessibility, obstacles etc

Page 24: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Plane surveying: practical aspects

2. Establish an accurate baseline by measurement from existing survey points, natural features, buildings etc. If none are available then the baseline must be fixed by absolute methods.

3. Establish as required any further control points by triangulation or trilateration from the base-line.

Page 25: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Plane surveying: practical aspects

4. Incorporate detail by tacheometry, traversing, tape & offset or whatever other method is appropriate.

5. The intermediate stations should where appropriate be cross-checked with the control points by resection and all traverses should be closed at a control point.

6. Inaccessible detail should be incorporated by triangulation or plane tabling from the ends of the baseline.

Page 26: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Baseline

ILLUSTRATION OF THE USE OF OFFSETS

Page 27: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Plane surveying: practical aspects

7. If a topographic survey is being undertaken, levelling traverses should be carried out around the survey stations and the baseline tied to the local benchmark by a closed traverse.

8. The use of a theodolite or total station will enable both the position and the elevation of stations to be found simultaneously by combined tacheometry and triangulation or by trilateration

Page 28: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

THE “CHAIN” SURVEY

How to establish relative plan positions

Page 29: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Chain survey

• Simplest of all survey techniques

• Relies on linear measurements; slopes >3o require some adjustment to technique

• Usually requires a clear line of sight

• The triangles used should be equilateral or approximately so

Page 30: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Terminology

• Trilateration is the measurement of sides of a triangle

• whereas triangulation refers to the measurement of the angles of the triangle

Page 31: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Basic equipment

• Ranging poles

• Survey pegs and ‘arrows’

• Chain & tape measure or other distance measuring instrument

• Plumb line

• Compass

Page 32: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Chain survey components

• Base line: the longest line

• Chain /survey lines

• Survey stations

• Offset lines

Page 33: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Order of events

• “Range out” survey stations with ranging rods

• Establish base line and measure accurately

• Measure remaining distances between other survey stations

• Measure offset lines whilst measuring between survey stations

Page 34: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Sloping ground

• If the ground slopes by more than about 3°, this must be allowed for in the survey.

• The measured distances are thus slant distances and must be corrected to true horizontal distances.

• This requires that the vertical angle between the stations is known

Page 35: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Ground distance determined

a

h

X

Page 36: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Sloping ground

• For an approximate survey, it may be sufficient to step up or downhill using a series of horizontal and vertical lines

• If the drop is measured at the same time, some estimate of the slope profile can be obtained

Page 37: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Chain surveying (“stepping”)

w

x

y

z

c

b

a

Page 38: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Sloping ground

• If stepping is not appropriate, more sophisticated methods must be used to measure the slant distance and the vertical angle simultaneously

• Requires optical sighting equipment: usually either a clinometer, Abney level or theodolite

Page 39: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Basic levelling in chain surveys

ah

h

Page 40: TECHNIQUES IN BASIC SURVEYING Patel Dixit K. (130400106054) Patel Dhruv P.(130400106051) Civil Engineering department Sankalchand Patel college of Engineering,

Correcting for horizontal distance:the “hypotenusal allowance”

a

h

z

correction factor = xy - yz

= xy(1 - cosa)

y

x