Gunter's chain


Gunter's chain is a distance measuring device used for surveying. It was designed and introduced in 1620 by English clergyman and mathematician Edmund Gunter. It enabled plots of land to be accurately surveyed and plotted, for legal and commercial purposes.
Gunter developed an actual measuring chain of 100 links. These, the chain and the link, became statutory measures in England and subsequently the British Empire.

Description

The chain is divided into 100 links, usually marked off into groups of 10 by brass rings or tags which simplify intermediate measurement. Each link is thus long. A quarter chain, or 25 links, measures and thus measures a rod. Ten chains measure a furlong and 80 chains measure a statute mile.
Gunter's chain reconciled two seemingly incompatible systems: the traditional English land measurements, based on the number four, and decimals based on the number 10. Since an acre measured 10 square chains in Gunter's system, the entire process of land area measurement could be computed using measurements in chains, and then converted to acres by dividing the results by 10. Hence 10 chains by 10 chains equals 10 acres, 5 chains by 5 chains equals 2.5 acres.

Method

The method of surveying a field or other parcel of land with Gunter's chain is to first determine corners and other significant locations, and then to measure the distance between them, taking two points at a time. The surveyor is assisted by a chainman. A ranging rod is placed in the ground at the destination point. Starting at the originating point the chain is laid out towards the ranging rod, and the surveyor then directs the chainman to make the chain perfectly straight and pointing directly at the ranging rod. A pin is put in the ground at the forward end of the chain, and the chain is moved forward so that its hind end is at that point, and the chain is extended again towards the destination point. This process is called ranging, or in the US, chaining; it is repeated until the destination rod is reached, when the surveyor notes how many full lengths have been laid, and he can then directly read how many links are in the distance being measured. The chain usually ends in a handle which may or may not be part of the measurement. An inner loop is the correct place to put the pin for some chains. Many chains were made with the handles as part of the end link and thus were included in the measurement.
The whole process is repeated for all the other pairs of points required, and it is a simple matter to make a scale diagram of the plot of land. The process is surprisingly accurate and requires only very low technology. Surveying with a chain is simple if the land is level and continuous—it is not physically practicable to range across large depressions or significant waterways, for example. On sloping land, the chain was to be "leveled" by raising one end as needed, so that undulations did not increase the apparent length of the side or the area of the tract.

Unit of length

Although link chains were later superseded by the steel ribbon tape, its legacy was a new statutory unit of length called the chain, equal to 66 feet. This unit still exists as a location identifier on British railways, as well as in some areas of America. In the United States, for example, Public Lands Survey plats are published in the chain unit to maintain the consistency of a two-hundred-year-old database. In the Midwest of the US it is not uncommon to encounter deeds with references to chains, poles, or rod units, especially in farming country. Minor roads surveyed in Australia and New Zealand in the 19th and early 20th centuries are customarily one chain wide.
The length of a cricket pitch is one chain.

Similar measuring chains

A similar American system, of lesser popularity, is Ramsden’s or the engineer’s system, where the chain consists also of 100 links, each one foot long. The original of such chains was that constructed, to very high precision, for the measurement of the baselines of the Anglo-French Survey and the Principal Triangulation of Great Britain.
The even less common Rathborn system, also from the 17th century, is based on a 200-link chain of two rods length. Each rod consists of 100 links,, which are called seconds, ten of which make a prime.
Vincent Wing made chains with 9.90-inch links, most commonly as 33-foot half-chains of 40 links. These chains were sometimes used in the American colonies, particularly Pennsylvania.
In India, surveying chains in length are used. Links are long.
In France after the French Revolution, and later in countries that had adopted the Metric System, chains, of 50 links each long were used until the 1950s.