![]() In a metes and bounds land description, there is a starting point which is always at a corner. Common terms might be the name of a tree, creek, owners of land bordering the property and even piles of rocks. Therefore, when land is surveyed in this manner, the results can be quite interesting. "Bounds" refers to the naming of physical features in defining the boundaries of the land. Link: 7.92 inches perch/pole: 16.5 feet or 1/4 chain or 25 links or 198 inches rod: 16.5 feet chain: 66 feet 4 rods or 100 links furlong: 664 feet Bounds For example the following terms were common when doing a metes and bounds survey: Various forms of measurement were used to determine distance. To find the direction, a compass was used indicating north, south, east, west as well as the degree of direction between 0 and 90. The word "metes" is defined as the direction and distance of a line the line forming the boundary of the property. ![]() States which used this form of surveying were the thirteen original colonies (Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Virginia) as well as the state land states Hawaii, Kentucky, Maine, Texas, Tennessee, Vermont, West Virginia and parts of Ohio. The system is still in existence today for land which was acquired before the present system of surveying land was adopted. ![]() Prior to the Revolutionary War, when land was surveyed, the “metes and bounds” system was used to define boundaries. ![]()
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