Any ideas?

  • FartsWithAnAccent
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    14111 days ago

    That is a surveyor’s mark called an Above Ground Marker. It is used as a point of reference when they survey they land.

  • SolidGrue
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    8911 days ago

    Its called a benchmark, used by surveyors as a known point from which to take readings. We had a benchmark on the edge of of our property in the town where In grew up. It was a square, white marble column, like a truncated obelisk with the point cut off to make a 4" square flat top, buried at the roadside and standing a couple inches proud of the grass. It had a cross with a dot in the middle, and a geodetic ID number engraved on the top.

    Nailed it with the lawnmower once or twice. That’d really put the Fear in you.

  • @[email protected]
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    7911 days ago

    Control point for ley lines. Keeps the magic channeled to prevent chaos from breaking out.

    • @[email protected]
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      3111 days ago

      Yeah, this. You can step on one, and it’s fine. Just don’t step on two and complete the circuit, it’s like boofing the third rail.

  • Daemon Silverstein
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    7311 days ago

    A marker point for geodetic marking. Also known as triangulation station or trigonometrical point, it’s fixed to the ground with its known coordinates.

    • @[email protected]
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      1911 days ago

      Yep, these are the measures that keep the underworld locked for the rich and I am tired of pretending it’s not.

  • @[email protected]
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    4311 days ago

    It controls where true north is, and if you remove it that will really mess with geographers and surveyors

    • @[email protected]
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      1911 days ago

      Please don’t, people! I don’t want to have to re-learn geography with different orientations…

  • @Typotyper
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    1911 days ago

    Canada’s look different. They have a reference number

    • @[email protected]
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      1011 days ago

      This is a survey monument vs the original post being a control point. Survey monuments are established on a larger scale.

      When you need to reference a known elevation or XY coordinate, there is a network of survey monuments with known coordinates, usually installed and documented by governments. You reference a known location’s elevation and north x west coordinates and then use instrumentation to determine angle changes to transfer the known elevation to a series of other locations.

      When you section off property or build things, like roads or buildings, you use this network of points and triangulate paths off of them to the job site by calculating angles and distances. Since you have to maintain line of sight while traversing the distance, you add points you can use to pivot on and travel great distances. These points are called ‘control points’ or ‘benchmarks’.

      The main post pic is a control point. Your picture is a survey monument.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 days ago

      You see those in the US too. I think the one in original photo is for temporary use. I.e. embed it for your project and leave when done.

      • @Typotyper
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        311 days ago

        That would make sense given the lack of refrence numbers.

    • Maeve
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      011 days ago

      Just more proof they’re* holding us down.

      *Blessed autocorrect

    • @[email protected]
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      211 days ago

      once you start to notice them, you’ll never stop seeing them everywhere.

      this one is a magnetic nail, so it can be found more easily with a metal detector, which is pretty handy when there’s a foot or two of snow on the ground.

      you’ll also see crosses, squares, and triangles carved out in stone, as well as the super common drill holes in concrete, which are typically only for temporary points.

      I’ve found 100+ year old control points drilled into old stone walls, and they can still check within like ¼" of the new maps.

  • @[email protected]
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    710 days ago

    Mind control relay. You can try to remove it but are mentally incapable unless you have a tinfoil hat.

  • Dr. Wesker
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    -711 days ago

    Shotgun shells buried in the concrete. Don’t stomp on them too hard!