FIG PUBLICATION NO. 50History of SurveyingJan de Graeve and Jim Smith
Contents1. Preserving Surveyors’ Professional Heritage 2. The Struve Geodetic Arc 3. Other Activities, Publications and Material PrefaceThe history of surveying and measurement has been part of FIG work since its establishment more than 130 years ago. This is natural because of the role of surveying, mapping and exploring the globe since beginning of mankind. The history was originally part of the general professional commissions (Commission 1) and then received its own place in the FIG structure, first as an ad hoc Commission and then as a permanent institution of the Federation. Since its establishment the International Institution for the History of Surveying and Measurement (IIHSM) has been very active in organising its events, exhibitions and reprinting old books that are relevant in understanding the history of geodesy and surveying. The biggest result of the IIHSM has been the work on getting the Struve Arc included in the list of the UNESCO World Heritage Monuments. Together with authorities from the ten countries where the arc exists the long time dream was finally recognised in 2005. This publication recognises also this work together with other activities that the institution has managed to implement during its more than fifteen years of history. I would like to express the sincere thanks of FIG to Jan de Graeve, Director of the Institution, Jim Smith, Honorary Secretary of IIHSM and other members of the institution for all their efforts in making the history of surveying a part of our common heritage within FIG.
Stig Enemark ForewordSurveying has been a focal point of evolution in technology joining mathematical applications to innovations in mechanical engineering and instrument construction technology. The original aims of a couple of surveyors has been realised through the International Institution for the History of Surveying and Measurement (IIHSM) – Permanent Institution within FIG. Over the last 15 years we have realised several objectives to the benefit of much goodwill from many colleagues and mutual understanding over the language barriers. The interest over the borders for the history of our profession has created many local working parties and it has been our goal to prepare some links between these local groups. Since the early 1990s we have assisted, with local surveyors in ten countries, in the realisation of inscription of the Struve Geodetic Arc on the World Heritage List of UNESCO and thereby making our profession benefiting from worldwide recognition. The aim to link the Struve Geodetic Arc with the Arc of the 30th Meridian through Eastern Africa could help to understanding, and some day predicting, the tectonic movements and the changes in the figure of our earth, by controlling the protected points for the foreseeable future and to understand the 3-dimensional deformations. The study of early surveying books can also be profitable for the future. The Romans used different borderstones and they were linked by directions and distances in a codescript; see for example The Ascanius manuscripts in Wolfenbüttel of the late 5th and 6th centuries published by Galland in 1554. Have you an instrument that visualises your survey on the land? It was described by Master Martin in the Surveyors’ Perambulator in 1661 and a similar instrument exists in the Deutsches Museum in Munich, and the most sophisticated is at Leiden in the Boerhaeve Museum that was used for finalising the drawing. With satisfaction we see that the attendances at the history workshops are steady around 50 with a new focus and interest from African colleagues as well as visiting non-surveyors. We can learn from our past and today’s new technologies will be collectables in the near future. Jan de Graeve 1. Preserving Surveyors’ Professional Heritage1.1 IntroductionThe professional work in FIG is done by Commissions, at present 10 in total and each covering a particular area of the professional interests. The other sub-division is that of Permanent Institutions. The International Institution for the History of Surveying and Measurement (IIHSM) is one of the two Permanent Institutions within the FIG. Each permanent institution has
The study within FIG of the history of surveying was started within FIG Commission 1 from the Sofia Congress of 1983 and continued there until 1994 when it was made an ad hoc Commission 0, later it was for a while referred to as ad hoc Commission 11 and then in 1998 it became a Permanent Institution within FIG and remains so to today. It gathers together small groups of persons interested in any aspect of the history of surveying and measurement for workshops or symposia, generally coinciding with events of the main FIG but not exclusively so. In addition it has mounted several exhibitions and taken on a major research project as well as other smaller ones. 1.2 AimsThe aims of the Group for the History of Surveying were formally set out at the FIG Congress in Melbourne in 1994 although they had been the unwritten aims of the Group for some years before. The aims of the IIHSM are (in edited form) as follows:
1.2.1 Studies
Early in its existence with its European colleagues the Group prepared for Europe an international trilingual directory of places of interest for the Surveyor: Helmut Minow. Historical Surveying Instruments – List of collections in Europe – 1st (1982) and 2nd edition (1990). This publication details the holdings of many of the more important repositories of old surveying instruments. As a result of this initiative two of the larger museums have produced remarkable catalogues and inventories. IIn Dortmund (Germany) the German colleagues completed in 2010 the 3rd edition of Museumhandbuch. Vermessungsgeschicte and in Cambridge (U.K.) the Whipple Museum produced The Compleat Surveyor by Jim Bennett and Olivia Brown and their first catalogue of a series: no. 1: Surveying. 1.2.2 PreservationThere is an urgent need to work for preservation, promotion and collaboration. So often today one hears, too late, that this or that establishment has jettisoned its store of old, early or obsolete surveying instruments.
1.2.3 Promotion of interest in history of surveyingIntroducing the history of surveying should be part of the education system, although the evolution of instrumentation has often been part of that already. Achievements in, and the evolution of, techniques and instrumentation can prepare any new generation to work with completely new technologies as today where a given technology might be obsolete within 20 or 30 years. Can readers remember that the first Hewlett Packard 65, compact computer with programmes, was launched only in 1972 and prior to that it was necessary to use logarithmic tables, nomograms and hand cranked calculators? There was no (affordable) electro-magnetic distance measuring equipment available for every survey party, until the Geodimeter and the Tellurometer were invented within ten years of each other shortly after the War II and changed the methodology of surveying from triangulation to trilateration. 1.2.4 CollaborationSurveyors can act as experts together with other institutions such as educational institutions, public authorities and museums and together with curators take care of surveying collections. Even now efforts are being made to gather sufficient interest and funding to found a Museum of Map Making in the U.K. This idea has been around for many years but there is gathering impetus now with the increasing loss of appropriate artefacts and the loss of the dedicated land survey display at the Science Museum in London. Many National Survey Organisations feel it to be their duty to set up museums of their past achievements and instrumentation, but some as the Ordnance Survey in the UK have yet to be sparked into life in this area. In addition there can be cooperation with study‑groups in other disciplines, working in similar fields such as the history of geodesy, cartography, hydrography, geology, photogrammetry, astronomy, mathematics, the history of scientific instrument societies and history of other relevant sciences. Some already exist, for example, in the Netherlands. As in earlier times the “Géomètre” or the surveyor was the learned man practising all or many of these fields. 1.2.5 Information disseminationThere is also the duty of spreading information on these activities:
Lastly surveyors have a role in society and so often have key positions in administrations, technical services, or government duties where our influence by recommendation, to public authorities, will be of primary importance and especially to give guidelines for preservation of basic documents for identification of property and for safeguarding the instruments. It was noted that groups studying the history of surveying already existed in many countries for example, Germany, Belgium, France, Switzerland, United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Australia, USA, Poland and Hungary, and interest for the subject was acknowledged by the FIG Council. History Workshops and/ or exhibitions have been held at most of the FIG Congresses and Working Weeks since 1985. For the assistance of future researchers a list of the papers presented at the above gatherings is on the website of the IIHSM. Additionally the Group has supported various other appropriate gatherings around the world. 1.2.6 ResearchAt the FIG Melbourne Congress of 1994 delegates from Finland floated idea of trying to obtain UNESCO World Heritage status for the Struve Geodetic Arc. This is a triangulation scheme observed between 1816 and 1852 from the North of Norway to the Black Sea. This turned into a major research exercise that was to cover ten years of effort before it finally succeeded, see also chapter 3.1.
2. The Struve Geodetic Arc2.1 Struve Arc and its way to UNESCO World Heritage MonumentThe field work on the Struve Geodetic Arc (or Russo–Scandinavian Triangulation) was observed between 1816 and 1852. Before the end of that century there had been several expeditions to try and trace the surviving stations. Aarne Veriö [1] refers to this in his paper of 1993 where it is noted that Professor Alfred Petrelius of the Technical University in Helsinki made systematic searches in 1886, 1888 and 1889. At that time local knowledge of the measurement scheme still survived and he was able to draw upon some of that in his searches. His activities were in the area from the South coast of Finland to the northernmost point of the Gulf of Bothnia near the city of Kemi. Of the 71 stations in this section, 8 were not marked permanently and of the other 63 he found 51. In 1914 efforts were made by K. H. Mannermaa to find stations north of Tornio; in 1928 by Aarne Rainesalo and later expeditions took place in 1968 and 1989 on the initiative of Seppo Härmälä who had been a Deputy Director General of the National Board of Survey for Finland. These latter investigations were by Aarne Veriö who found that of the 92 points on Finnish territory 8 were undocumented (presumably the same ones as Petruvius had noted), and of the remaining 84, 61 were found, 18 were known to have been destroyed and 5 were of unknown fate. All this background was brought together by Aarne Veriö in a paper produced in 1993 for an International Scientific Conference in Tartu (formerly Dorpat), in Estonia to mark the 200th anniversary of the birth of F. G. W. Struve and J. H. Mädler and the 100th anniversary of E. J. Öpik. This Conference took place from 26 to 29 August 1993. Unfortunately Veriö was unable to present the paper because of ill health so it was presented on his behalf by Seppo Härmälä. In his paper Veriö expressed the importance of the 1989 expedition to preserve “one document of a past generation’s work and international cooperation”. “We can state that these modest holes in the rock are valuable relics, archaeological documents. In our neighbouring countries there are some better visible monuments. The big statue in Fuglenes in Norway is famous. In Estonia, the Struvian stations and the impressive end of the Simuna baseline are nearly places of pilgrimage among land surveyors.” Although he did not specifically suggest in the paper the idea of the Arc becoming a World Heritage Monument there was nevertheless a Resolution accepted on 28 August 1993 “urging the governments of those countries i.e. Norway, Sweden, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Ukraine, Byelorussia and Moldavia that still possess relics of that enterprise to take all possible steps to preserve those relics”, including an approach to UNESCO to declare them to be World Heritage sites (Russia was inadvertently omitted in the drafting of this Resolution). The Chairman of the meeting was Alan H. Batten, an astronomer from Canada, but English by birth, who had, only a few years earlier, published a book on the lives of some of the Struve family. [2]. That volume contains a chapter on Measuring the Earth. The following year FIG held its Congress in Melbourne, Australia (5–12 March 1994). There Bjorn-Geirr Harsson presented a paper [6] summarising the work of Struve and the various phases in which it was carried out. Like the Veriö paper, this did not contain any direct suggestion that the Struve Arc might be submitted for inclusion on the UNESCO World Heritage List. However immediately after the session in which Harsson gave his paper, Seppo Härmälä suggested to Jan de Graeve, Chairperson of FIG Commission 1 that it might well be appropriate to ask FIG to consider a resolution on this topic.
A suitable wording was agreed and the resolution put before the General Assembly of the whole of FIG. It was duly carried as follows:
A further similar resolution was passed at the General Assembly of the International Astronomical Union (IAU) at its General Assembly in The Hague in 1994. In addition the International Association for Geodesy (IAG) also expressed its support.
At that time, 1994, historical topics within FIG came under Commission 1 but the IIHSM was soon to come into being. Those in Commission 1 with historical interests took the idea up and began the prolonged efforts to get all ten countries interested and actively working together on the project. Language problems were only some of the many difficulties encountered in what was very much a multi-cultural exercise. At the FIG Working Week in Prague in May 2000 Seppo Härmälä presented a further paper [5] in which he not only emphasised the earlier papers by Veriö but was able to comment upon the efforts put in up to that date in endeavouring to obtain active cooperation from all ten countries concerned. He went further by adding:
Härmälä was hoping that a submission could be made by the end of that year, 2000, but that was over-optimistic by 4 years. One major problem was the fact of how different the Struve Geodetic Arc was to any other WHM up to that time. The Pyramids, The Victoria Falls, Stone Town in Zanzibar and the Taj Mahal for example were all features of great size, great attraction and visible from miles away. The Struve arc to be presented to UNESCO in 2004 was 34 points, each of a small mark in a block of stone at most about 0.5 m across, spread over 2821 kms and each only visible (if at all) when nearly on top of it. Even when marked by a nearby monument and inscribed plaque any one of them only occupied around a square metre. So how could such a project qualify? In discussions with UNESCO this seemed not to be a problem. In its favour was that the WHM would span 10 countries, a very appealing idea to UNESCO, whereas most other designated WHMs were in just a single country. The international cooperation over ten countries was of great appeal. In addition it was felt that UNESCO could introduce a new category of monument, one that related to a scientific achievement rather that of the culturally and visually attractive sort. In 2002 the IIHSM compiled an Interim Report of the material then available on the Struve Arc as a means of spreading the word of its worth and of attracting funding. Some of this material later formed part of the final submission. However, discussions with a UK UNESCO delegate left one with no doubt that it was a hopeless case and not worth pursuing. It is encouraging to recall how that advice was ignored to good effect.
Since the beginning there had been a continuing, but spasmodic interchange of information with the National Land Survey of Finland but it was at the Struve Conference in Tallinn in 2002 that the National Land Survey of Finland took on the massive task of compiling and printing the final documentation to be presented to UNESCO. On several occasions meetings were held in Brussels when a representative of UNESCO met the Board of the IIHSM. He was knowledgeable in the techniques of surveying and could appreciate what was involved whereas many other UNESCO WHM delegates and staff would be from other disciplines and know little if anything of the subject. The major unknown was to be the particular interests and specialisations not only of the UNESCO inspectors but particularly of those who would be doing the voting. How many of them would have any knowledge of surveying, particularly in our case, of geodesy? There would be architects, archaeologists, specialists in heritage protection and others but the presence of a land surveyor would be unlikely. So it was that a major part of the submission was a section on the “Background of the Struve Geodetic Arc” written with the non-surveyors in mind. This set out, albeit briefly, but in simple terms, what triangulation was, what it was trying to achieve, and the problem of the shape of the earth. This forms the 34 page Appendix I of the submission. A Bibliography of 150 entries at section 7(c) of the submission forms a useful starting point for anyone wishing to pursue further research on the topic although there have been many further papers written since that list was drawn up in 2003. By the end of January 2004 the submission document [3] was complete and this was presented to the Director of UNESCO by Jarmo Ratia, Jan de Graeve and Pekka Tätilä.
Decisions within UNESCO have to mature and are not rapid. It would be 18 months before the outcome was known. In that time inspectors appointed by UNESCO visited all the points and had detailed discussions with many persons. Finally at its annual meeting held in Durban, South Africa, on 15 July 2005, the vote of delegates was taken and the positive decision was agreed unanimously. Since the Struve Geodetic Arc was inscribed on the World Heritage List of historical Monuments it has been pleasing to see how the local communities in the vicinity of any of the 34 designated points have really taken the marks under their wing and not only maintained them but promoted them. Each country held ceremonies to “inaugurate” their points, marking some with monuments and then improving access facilities, information boards, car parking and even arranging that they appear on various tourist itineraries. The most northerly point in Hammerfest, North Norway is within some few minutes walk of the ferry terminal where many cruise ships stop. It is said that in the last year alone 100,000 visitors from such ships were able to visit the monument. Of course, at the other extreme, some only attract a very small number of visitors because of their remoteness. To promote this monument in a different way a year was spent in translating from French to English the two volumes written by Struve [4] detailing all the work of the survey. These two volumes amount to almost 1,100 pages and are now available in a limited edition bound in simulated leather to mirror the original edition. 2.2 Continuing Struve Arc activitiesFor the future work is progressing, albeit slowly, on gathering all the relevant information of the triangulation extending to the south of the Struve Arc so that it might in due course by put forward as an extension to the same World Heritage Monument. If this happens it would provide a continuous monument from the North of Norway to near Port Elizabeth in South Africa. A span of 105º of latitude. The survey has been achieved over many years but the difficulty is obtaining all the information required and then getting all the countries involved to agree to the plan. Why the interest to extend the monument so far south? There are particular reasons
3. Other Activities, Publications and Material3.1 Research projects
3.2 Papers and presentationsHistorical papers have been presented at various FIG Congresses and Working Weeks since September 1985. As an aid to future researchers a list of them is given in the appendix. An up-to-date list is also available on the web site of IIHSM at www.fig.net/hsm. The latest presentations are also available online. 3.3 ExhibitionsFIG Congress Toronto 1986A commemorative exhibition has been travelling with great success to Canada in Toronto and Quebec, to England where it was on display for two months in the Science Museum, to Madrid in the Museo Naval, to Belgium in Liège and Gent. The Chernobyl disaster made it not possible to exhibit it in “Lapland”. This was an exhibition mounted jointly by the Académie des Sciences of Paris and the FIG History Group to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the expeditions sent to Peru and Lapland in 1736 to determine the figure of the earth. This was a shape that had been put into doubt by the controversy between the Cassinis in France and Newton in England. Was the earth prolate or oblate? The latter proved to be the case.
FIG Congress Brighton 1998Over a period of 5 days an exhibition “The Art & History of Surveying” was staged at the University of Brighton Gallery. Over 150 illustrations from 33 different sources were displayed on 42 panels. The whole exhibit was later put on to a CD that was sold to raise funds for the group. It was also displayed at several survey gatherings around the world.
FIG Congress Munich 2006During the period of this Congress an exhibition of historically significant surveying texts was mounted in the library of the Deutsches Museum. A CD was produced that gave details of each of the books together with some illustrations. This CD was offered to all the delegates. It was also arranged for delegates to the History sessions to see both the fine survey exhibit at the Museum and also that within the Bavarian State Survey Dept.
FIG Congress Sydney 2010A two day symposium and exhibition will be mounted at the time of the FIG Congress in Sydney, Australia in April 2010. FIG Working Week Rome 2012Jan de Graeve visited Rome in February 2010 to prepare the IIHSM symposium for FIG Working Week 2012. Mercator will also be commemorated 15 December 2012 in Belgium, Germany and the Netherlands. 3.4 CalendarsThree attempts have been made to produce and sell calendars with illustrations of historical themes but these were of limited success in obtaining funds for the running of the group so have been discontinued. However the income from the calendars together with that from the reproduction books (see below) allowed sponsorship with the Moldovan partners to research the Struve points in that country and to sponsor exhibition in the Oxford History of Science Museum (United Kingdom). 3.5 Reproduction of historical textsTwo surveying texts of considerable note were reproduced in the USA for purchase. These are:
There are still a few copies of these available for purchase. 3.6 The Struve volumesAs mentioned already, the two volumes of Struve’s Report [4] on his work have been translated from French to English. Any one interested in these should contact Jan de Graeve. 3.7 PublicationsAmong the books published by colleagues under the auspices of the IIHSM since 1985 are:
3.8 The futureAttendance at the various sessions organised by the IIHSM is open to any interested persons. They need not be attending any FIG event to which the sessions are attached. Any person who has ideas for research into an aspect of the history of surveying or measurement is welcome to get in touch and make their ideas known. Whilst financial assistance is not very likely, help is often possible in giving leads to both knowledgeable individuals and printed material. Whenever it is brought to notice that important materials – whether books or instruments – are in danger of destruction then, where possible, efforts are made to secure their safety and this will continue. 3.9 Administration and contactsDirector of the IIHSM Hon. Secretary Deputy Director Hon. Treasurer Meetings Organiser References1. Veriö, A. 1994. The later phases and utilizing of the northern part of the Struvean chain. Geodeet. Nr. 6 (30). pp. 27–30. Presented to an International Scientific Conference in Tartu, August 1993. 2. Batten, A H. 1988. Resolute and Undertaking Characters: The lives of Wilhelm and Otto Struve. Astrophysics and Space Science Library, D Reidel Publishing Company, Holland 3. Nomination of the Struve Geodetic Arc for inscription on the World Heritage List. 2004. January. 4. Struve, F G W. 1860. Arc du Méridien de 25º 20’ entre le Danube et la Mer Glaciale mésure depuis 1816 jusqu’en 1850. 3 vol. St. Petersburg, 5. Härmälä, S. Struve Arc. 2000. FIG Working Week. Prague. May. 6. Harsson, B-G (with Chubey, M S, Kaptug, V A, Preiss G and Umarbaeva N D). 1994. The Russian Scandinavian meridian arc measurements 1816–1852. FIG. Melbourne. AppendixHistorical papers presented at FIG Congresses and Working Weeks since September 1985.Copyright © International Federation of Surveyors, February
2010 International Federation of Surveyors (FIG) Published in English Published by Cover illustrations: ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
FIG PUBLICATION No 50 History of Surveying Published in English Published by The International Federation of Surveyors (FIG), February 2010 Printed copies can be ordered from: |