Chain surveying involves measuring distances directly in the field using chains or tapes to divide an area into a network of triangles. Key elements include:
- Ranging rods are used to locate intermediate points along survey lines. Direct ranging is used when points are intervisible, while reciprocal ranging is used when they are not.
- Distances are measured using various types of chains, tapes, and approximate methods like pacing. Metric and engineer's chains are commonly used and calibrated periodically.
- The principle of chain surveying is to divide the area into triangles by measuring the sides, even if angular measurements are not taken. This allows the area to be plotted from the linear measurements alone.