Abstract

Abstract. The geomatics profession has gone through a major revolution during the last two decades with the emergence of advanced GNSS, GIS and Remote Sensing technologies. These technologies have changed the core principles and working procedures of geomatics professionals. For this reason, surveying and mapping regulations, standards and specifications should be updated to reflect these changes. In Israel, the "Survey Regulations" is the principal document that regulates the professional activities in four key areas geodetic control, mapping, cadastre and Georaphic information systems. Licensed Surveyors and mapping professionals in Israel are required to work according to those regulations. This year a new set of regulations have been published and include a few major amendments as follows: In the Geodesy chapter, horizontal control is officially based on the Israeli network of Continuously Operating GNSS Reference Stations (CORS). The regulations were phrased in a manner that will allow minor datum changes to the CORS stations due to Earth Crustal Movements. Moreover, the regulations permit the use of GNSS for low accuracy height measurements. In the Cadastre chapter, the most critical change is the move to Coordinate Based Cadastre (CBC). Each parcel corner point is ranked according to its quality (accuracy and clarity of definition). The highest ranking for a parcel corner is 1. A point with a rank of 1 is defined by its coordinates alone. Any other contradicting evidence is inferior to the coordinates values. Cadastral Information is stored and managed via the National Cadastral Databases. In the Mapping and GIS chapter; the traditional paper maps (ranked by scale) are replaced by digital maps or spatial databases. These spatial databases are ranked by their quality level. Quality level is determined (similar to the ISO19157 Standard) by logical consistency, completeness, positional accuracy, attribute accuracy, temporal accuracy and usability. Metadata is another critical component of any spatial database. Every component in a map should have a metadata identification, even if the map was compiled from multiple resources. The regulations permit the use of advanced sensors and mapping techniques including LIDAR and digita l cameras that have been certified and meet the defined criteria. The article reviews these new regulations and the decision that led to them.

Highlights

  • The geomatics profession has been regulated in Israel since 1929 when the British Mandate enacted the Survey Ordinance of 1929

  • The Survey Regulations defines the basic principles and quality requirements of surveying and mapping work, it is the Director General Instructions that provide the technical details about the methodology and technologies

  • Each digital spatial database should be provided according to the Director General Instructions, which specify the layer structure, attributes fields, table relationships etc. and with a Metadata file

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The geomatics profession has been regulated in Israel since 1929 when the British Mandate enacted the Survey Ordinance of 1929. The Ordinance states that "Any map, chart or diagram of land shell not be accepted by the Register Office or approved as an evidence in any court, unless prepared and signed by a licensed surveyor". The strong statements of the Ordinance requires proper definition the surveying profession, its work, and the appropriate standards that surveyors should follow. The Survey Regulations defines the basic principles and quality requirements of surveying and mapping work, it is the Director General Instructions that provide the technical details about the methodology and technologies. The Survey Regulations are being updated once in about a decade to meet the new technological, legal, and administrative changes and developments. The update is made according to the following principles: New regulations are developed as a joint cooperation between the Survey of Israel, Government Offices, public agencies, academy, surveying companies and the private sector. We will describe the three chapters of the Survey Regulations, namely; the Geodesy, Cadastre, and Mapping and Geospatial Information chapters

REGULATIONS IN GEODESY
CADASTRAL REGULATIONS
MAPPING AND GEOSPATIAL INFORMATION REGULATIONS
Findings
CONCLUSIONS AND FURTHER WORK
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