Surveying fundamentals: Is the bearing of a line defined as its horizontal angle measured from magnetic south, or is it referenced from a different directional meridian?

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: Incorrect

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Bearing is a core concept in land surveying and mapping. It specifies the direction of a line relative to a reference meridian so field crews, designers, and GIS professionals can communicate orientation unambiguously. This item checks whether the reference is magnetic south or the standard surveying meridians.



Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Bearing is a horizontal angle used for line direction in surveying.
  • Common meridians are true (geodetic) north, magnetic north, or grid north of a mapped projection.
  • Survey texts define quadrant bearings from north or south toward east or west, but the zero reference is north–south lines, not specifically magnetic south.


Concept / Approach:
In practice, a bearing is measured from a north–south reference. Azimuths are measured clockwise from north 0–360 degrees. Quadrant bearings are noted as N or S first, followed by an angle less than 90 degrees, then E or W (for example, N 35° E). The meridian used (true, grid, or magnetic) must be specified, but it is not exclusively magnetic south.



Step-by-Step Solution:

Identify the reference meridian: true north, grid north, or magnetic north.Recognize that quadrant bearings originate from a north or south line but are not defined as “from magnetic south” by default.Conclude the statement is incorrect because it singles out magnetic south as the definition.Note that declination/variation must be applied if magnetic references are used.


Verification / Alternative check:
Check any standard surveying handbook: bearings are tied to a specified meridian, typically true or grid north; magnetic references are possible but must be stated and are not limited to “from magnetic south.”



Why Other Options Are Wrong:

Correct: Would wrongly assert the definition.Depends only on map scale: Scale does not set the meridian reference.Only true for cadastral surveys: Cadastral practice also uses true or grid north as standards.


Common Pitfalls:
Confusing bearings (quadrant format) with azimuths (0–360 from north); assuming magnetic is always the reference; ignoring local declination when using magnetic readings.


Final Answer:
Incorrect

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