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by wiml
903 days ago
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I'm not a historian of real property law, but my understanding is it's more often the other way around. The legal boundaries were/are defined by a mixture of reference to objects on the ground and conventional use. Any WGS84 coordinates you might have were non-normative. The concept of land ownership predates the concept of a single unified coordinate system by millennia. |
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And I assume now property boundaries are kind of based on a mixture of all of this? But there's a trend toward WGS84 coordinates or similar?
I also assume along the way measurement mistakes have been reasonably common or situations where those "stable" features in the landscape turned out to be not so stable.
Resolving all these issues must be a nightmare and while I've been vaguely aware of this history of surveying it now seems like it must be quite fascinating and I should try and read more about it.