ANZLIC Metadata Profile: An Australian/New Zealand Profile of AS/NZS ISO 19115:2005, Geographic information - Metadata
Metadata Standard Version
1.1
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Data Identification
Citation
Citation
Title
NZ Survey Affected Parcels List
Date
Abstract
This table is used to describe the many to many relationship between surveys and parcels. This is a table to link [NZ Survey Plans](http://data.linz.govt.nz/layer/794) data with spatial parcel layers such as [NZ Parcels](http://data.linz.govt.nz/layer/1571-nz-parcels), [NZ Linear Parcels](http://data.linz.govt.nz/layer/1570-nz-linear-parcels) or [NZ Primary Parcels](http://data.linz.govt.nz/layer/772).
An affected parcel is a parcel which is affected by the approval of a survey dataset. A parcel may be affected, created or extinguished. For example, a survey can affect extinguish parcels by rendering them historical and at the same time may create new parcels (subdivision). Parcels may be affected by a survey but remain current (definition of an easement etc).
For more information about this table and other tables and layers that make up this dataset refer to the [support documentation](http://data.linz.govt.nz/file/12).
Purpose
This table is used to describe the many to many relationship between surveys and parcels.
An affected parcel is a parcel which is affected by the approval of a survey dataset, including any parcels created by the approval of that survey dataset.
Released under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International with:
Following Disclaimers: 1. This data is made available through the LINZ Data Service and is based on information contained with Landonline (New Zealand's Official Title and Cadastral System)
2. Not to be used for defining legal parcel boundaries or transacting land
Following Attribution: If you publish, distribute or otherwise disseminate this work to the public without adapting it, the following attribution to Land Information New Zealand should be used: 'CC BY 4.0 Land Information New Zealand’
If you adapt this work in any way or include it in a collection, and publish, distribute or otherwise disseminate that adaptation or collection to the public, the following attribution to Land Information New Zealand should be used: ‘Contains data sourced from the LINZ Data Service and licensed for reuse under CC BY 4.0.'
If "attribution stacking" problems exist then the requirement to display the above attribution statements is waived and in lieu the attribution statement is to be made in any terms or conditions associated with the work/ product/ application/ etc.
LINZ and its predecessors have been responsible for cadastral data in New Zealand for more than a hundred years.
National mapping of parcels was undertaken as part of the maintenance and indexing roles with scales ranging from 1:396 (50 links to an inch) to 1:50,000. The predominant scales in urban areas were 1:792, 1:1000, 1:1584 and 1:2000. Predominant rural scales were of 1:7920 and 1:10,000.
The first digital data was created in the late 1980’s (along with the creation of the Department of Survey and Land Information) by hand digitising the department's cadastral record maps into the digital cadastral database (DCDB). The DCDB provided the graphical index to survey records throughout New Zealand until the implementation of Landonline (2000-2002). As Landonline was rolled out to each Land District, that district’s DCDB data was converted into the Landonline database (also known as the Core Record System or CRS) and then decommissioned. The survey conversion project scanned survey plans and converted them to 1.4 million electronic files. Additionally, boundary dimensions for a total of 1.4 million parcels were captured from around 300,000 surveys. This involved the capture of some 13 million observations and the adjustment of five million geodetic survey marks.
Unlike the prior systems that subsequently mapped cadastral records, Landonline is 'live' amd reflects realtime transactions as it enables surveyors, lawyers and other land professionals (including Territorial Authorities) to search and lodge title dealings and survey data digitally. New parcel shapes are therefore survey accurate. However as the change to parcels (attributes or shape) is mainly driven by the subdivision process, only a small portion of the parcels dataset will be changing at any given point of time.
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Released under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International