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TABLE OF CONTENTS.

Difference between the Objects in view in the Survey of a Cultivated

and that of a new Unsettled Country. - First Operations. Preliminary Ex-

ploration. Objects to be principally considered.-Sites of Townships.-

Main Lines of Communication.-Guides for marking on the Ground the

Divisions of Properties. Size of these Divisions. --Precautions to be ob-

served to secure to the Public Rights of Road, &c. - Necessity for Extensive

Surveys on the First Settlement of a New Colony. - Deviations from Gene-

ral Rules in laying out Sections. Frontages on, and Access to Rivers and

Main Roads. Sectional Roads. - Monopoly of Water to be guarded against.

-Sections laid out in Broken Irregular Ground. - Statistical and other In-

formation to be fully afforded to Settlers.-Marking Boundaries of Sec-

tions and Roads. - Reservation of Rights of Road. -Natural Features of

Ground. Geological and Mineralogical Specimens, and Meteorological

Register, &c.-Usual Method of marking Regular Figures upon the Ground.

-Necessity for a Triangulation to conduct these Operations with any degree

of accuracy when upon an extended Scale. --Advantage of Carrying it on

rather in advance of the Sectional Surveys. - Other Uses of the Triangula-

tion.-District Surveyors. --Surveying by Contract.-Rate of Progress and

Cost per Acre of the Sectional Survey and Marking out Roads. Cost of

the Triangulation.- Method of Survey pursued in the Canterbury Settle-

ment, New Zealand. -Temporary Division of Land for pastoral Purposes.

-Territorial Division of Counties, Hundreds, &c. -Remarks on Exploring

Expeditions. Method of Proceeding. -Objects in View, and collateral In-

formation to be obtained

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IV. TO FIND THE LOCAL TIME.

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