Surveying Equipment

Additional views

Scope and staff for surveying Gunter's chain for surveying

Basic details

Surveying Equipment is an artifact, with genre equipment.
It was created sometime in 1800.
Worthington Historical Society is the contributor.
You can find the original at Worthington Historical Society.

Background

These surveying instruments belonged to Scioto Company proprietor, James Kilbourne. Pictured here are the box with compass and magnet, Gunter's chain, scope and staff. A Gunter's chain (66 feet long, or 20 meters) was the standard unit of measurement in surveying during the early nineteenth century. It was used in conjunction with a surveyor's compass. A Gunter's chain has 100 links, each measuring 7.92 inches (20.12 centimeters). The chain is the basis of measurement for an acre, which is equal to ten square chains (100,000 square links).

Subjects

It features the person James Kilbourne.
It covers the topic geography.
It covers the city Worthington.

Record details

This file was reformatted digital in the format video/jpeg.
The Worthington Memory identification code is whs0385_001.
This metadata record was human prepared by Worthington Libraries on . It was last updated .

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