This is the first of a series of documents that will
describe the contents of the PLSS CadNSDI data set.
What is the PLSS CadNSDI?
The CadNSDI or the Cadastral Publication Data Standard
is the cadastral data component of the NSDI.
This is the publication guideline for cadastral data that is intended to
provide a common format, naming conventions, domains, structure and content for
cadastral information that can be made available across jurisdictional
boundaries, providing consistent and uniform cadastral data to meet business
need that includes connections to the source information from the data stewards
or data custodians. The data stewards determine
which data are published and should be contacted for any questions on data
content or for additional information.
The cadastral publication data is data provided by cadastral data
producers in a standard form on a regular basis. Cadastral publication data has two primary
components, land parcel data and cadastral reference data. It is important to recognize that the
publication data are not the same as the operation and maintenance or
production data. The production data is
structured to optimize maintenance processes, is integrated with internal
agency operations, and contains much more detail than the publication
data. The publication data is a subset
of the more complete production data and is reformatted to meet a national
standard so data can be integrated across jurisdictional boundaries and be
presented in a consistent and standard form nationally.
The PLSS CadNSDI is the standardized form of the CadNSDI
containing PLSS data. This publication
format provides a suggested minimum. It
is fully compliant with the intent of the standard for a data producer to
include additional feature classes. For
example, there could be an added feature classes for recently monumented
corners or mining claim lodes.
Similarly, it is fully compliant with the intent of the
standard to add attributes to any feature class. For example some jurisdictions identify
corners that are photo-identifiable in the PLSSCorners Feature Class. It is
also compliant to extend the length of any fields in the feature classes. The field sizes are suggested minimum
lengths.
Data sets will contain only available information. A data steward cannot publish what is not
collected. For example, some states will
have township and first division level data; others will also include second
division polygons. Some data sets have
PLSSPoints and others do not. Over time it is expected that the content of all
data sets will be developed and grow to be more similar in completeness.
The two most common question or comments about this
standardized data have been
1.
There are too many features class, attributes,
etc.
2.
There are not enough features, attributes, etc.
The Cadastral Subcommittee, through its consensus data
standard development process, has agreed that this level of detail supports
most business processes and is the best compromise between too many and too
few.
What does the PLSS CadNSDI Contain?
The PLSS Cad NSDI database has this structure.
The Parcel Feature Data Set is included but it has not been
populated for any of the CadNSDI data sets.
The Cadastral Reference Feature Data Set is the primary focus of the
standardized data.
Summary
These are the cadastral
reference features that provide the basis and framework for parcel mapping and
for other mapping.
Description
These are the cadastral
reference features that provide the basis and framework for parcel mapping and
for other mapping. This feature data set contains PLSS and Other Survey System
data. The other survey systems include subdivision plats and those types of
survey reference systems. This feature data set also include feature classes to
support the special conditions in Ohio.
The Cadastral Reference Feature Data Set has the following
feature classes
Each of these feature classes will be described more fully
in other documents.
The Cadastral Reference Local contains localized data that
has not yet been integrated into the standardized data sets. Typically these are localized data such as a
portion of a county or a national forest area, where more accurate information
or more complete information has been identified but the data steward has not
incorporated this into the standardized data.
It is provide as a reference or as a notice that more current
information may be available, although it is not in the standardized form and
has not been fully evaluated. After the
localized data is incorporated into the standard it is removed from the
Cadastral Reference Local Feature Data Set.
Feature classes will not have standardized names, but will include the
localized data contributor in the name.
For example the following is an example from the Michigan PLSS CadNSDI,
with BLM, Kent County and Oakland County PLSS Points submitted in the Cadastral
Reference Local Feature Data Set.
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