A treatise on land-surveying, in six parts. Part I. Contains Definitions and Problems in Geometry. Part II. Rules for finding the Content of Land without using a Chain, but by stepping the dimensions, by which any Husbandman who knows the first five Rules of Arithmetic may find the Content of his own work. Part III. To survey with the Chain and Cross. Part IV. To survey with the Chain only. Part V. Rules for parting off any given portion of a Field, in form of a Triangle, Square or Parallelogram. Part VI. A full explanation of the method used by the most eminent Surveyors, in measuring and planning a Farm or a Lordship, with a Chain only. Illustrated with Five Copper-Plates, and an engraved Fac-Simile of a Field-Book. The Plates exhibit the progressive steps of planning a small Farm, and point out the appearances of the Plan in six different Stages. By Thomas Dix, of Oundle. The whole illustrated with one hundred and eighty diagrams, and ten copper-plates.

  • Dix, Thomas, 1769 or 1770-1813.
Date:
1799
  • Books
  • Online

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About this work

Publication/Creation

London : printed by H. Baldwin and Son, New Bridge-Street, for L. B. Seeley, Ave-Maria-Lane; J. Seeley, Buckingham; and the author at Oundle, 1799.

Physical description

x, 193, [1] p., plates : ill.,map ; 80.

References note

ESTC T114234

Reproduction note

Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Thomson Gale, 2003. (Eighteenth century collections online). Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.

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