TOPOGRAPHICAL SKETCHING.
39. Topographical drawing includes every thing relating to an accurate representation upon paper, of any piece of ground. The state of cultivation, roads, town, county, and state boundaries, and all else that occurs in nature. The sketching necessary in railroad surveying, however, does not embrace all of this, but only the delineation of streams and the undulations of ground within that limit which affects the road, perhaps 500 feet on each side of the line. The making of such sketches consists in tracing the irregular lines formed by the intersection of the natural surface, by a system of horizontal planes, at a vertical distance of five, ten, fifteen, or twenty feet, according to the accuracy required.
Fig. 13.
40. Suppose that we wish to represent upon a horizontal surface a right cone. The base m m, fig. 13, is shown by the circle of which the diameter is m, m. If the elevation is cut by the horizontal planes a a, b b, c c, the intersection of these planes with the conical surface is shown by the circles a, b, c, in plan. The less we make the horizontal distances, on plan, between the circles, the less also will be the vertical distance between the planes.
Wishing to find the elevation of any line which exists on plan, as 1, 2, 3, 3, 2, 1, we have only to find the intersection of the verticals drawn through the points 1, 2, 3, 3, 2, 1, and the elevation lines a a, b b, c c; this gives us the curve 4, 5, 6, 7, 6, 5, 4.
Fig. 14.
41. Again, in fig. 14, the cone is oblique, which causes the circles on plan to become eccentric and elliptic. Having given the line 1, 2, 3, as before, we find it upon the elevation in the same manner.
42. In the section of regular and full lined figures, the horizontal and vertical projections are also regular and full lined; but in a broken surface like the ground, the lines become quite irregular.