Article of the Month - 
	  March 2018
     | 
  
		A case for Geospatial Surveyors 
		
			Brian COUTTS, New Zealand
		
		
			
				
				  | 
			
			
				| Brian Coutts | 
			
		
		This article evaluates whether the term 
		"geomatics" 
		has met the original needs and if its use is still valid or if a better 
		term is available. While widely used in academia, the surveying 
		profession has been more reluctant to adopt the term and controversy and 
		confusion have grown up around its meaning.  Brian Coutts is 
		Chair of FIG Commission 1, Professional Standards and Practice. 
		
		SUMMARY
		In the 1980s a number of countries began using the term Geomatics in 
		relation to surveying. While first adopted in bilingual Canada it spread 
		to a number of other English speaking countries.  The reasons for its 
		need were commonly given at the time a) it embraced a field wider than 
		surveying b) land surveying had a poor public image, and c) a more 
		modern term was needed to attract students to university surveying 
		programmes.  While widely used in academia, the surveying profession has 
		been more reluctant to adopt the term and controversy and confusion have 
		grown up around its meaning.  This paper re-evaluates whether the term 
		geomatics has met the original needs and if its use is still valid or if 
		a better term is available.  It concludes that “geospatial” surveying 
		better meets the modern requirements for defining the role and practice 
		of what has traditionally been “land” surveying. 
		1. INTRODUCTION
		The art and science of the measurement of land and its depiction in 2 
		dimensions, be it on clay tablets, maps, plans or charts, has a long 
		tradition.  The “Blau monuments”, held in the British Museum, and 
		which date from approximately 3100 BCE, describe a piece of land and its 
		owner.  Cuneiform tablets dating back to about 2150 BCE, which now 
		form part of the Yale Babylonian Collection, record measurements and 
		calculations giving the area of a field.  They record the work of 
		those we would now call land surveyors.  Cooper describes the form 
		of mathematics used by these surveyors as “geometric algebra” and 
		suggests a range of applications beyond cadastral surveying to which 
		they may be applied, such as the volume of conical piles of grain (for 
		valuation) or the number of bricks required for a proposed building 
		(quantity surveying) (Cooper, 2009).
		The Roman agrimensores, or measurers of the land, also worked with 
		civil and military authorities.  They were influential in the 
		mapping and recording of land (Dilke, 1971) but also were needed to 
		assist in the construction of the Roman roads, aqueducts, and other 
		engineering works (engineering surveying) as well as the site selection 
		and  laying out of garrison towns, both temporary and permanent 
		(planning surveyors).   
		2. THE ORIGINS OF THE MODERN SURVEYOR 
		Ballantyne (1996) attributes the first use of the word survey in the 
		sense that it is used in the surveying profession, to 1550, based on a 
		definition of “survey” in the Oxford English Dictionary.  This 
		coincides with the beginning of the developments referred to above but 
		clearly indicates a beginning to the idea of the surveying of land.  
		It is likely that the dissolution of the monasteries by Henry VIII, the 
		resumption of their lands by the Crown, and the subsequent sale, rather 
		than feudal allocation of land, encouraged the development of land 
		surveying as an occupation.  New owners wished to enclose what they 
		“owned” and boundary demarcation became important.  The 
		standardisation of measurements by Elizabeth I added further need for an 
		individual with an understanding of measurements.  
		It was not until the Renaissance that England saw the development of 
		what was to become the now traditional land surveyor.  New 
		equipment became available in the form of telescopes with cross-hairs, 
		Gunter’s Chain, accurately machined graduated angular measurement 
		circles and Vernier scales.  New knowledge of mathematics in the 
		form of algebra, geometry and trigonometry had found its way to England 
		from China, India and Arabia through the Moorish invasion of the Iberian 
		Peninsula, and the travel of English scholars to study in Cordoba and 
		Toledo (Joseph, 1987; Usvat, 2013).
		3. SURVEYING AS A PROFESSION
		The original professions, the church, the law and medicine, began 
		being added to following the Industrial Revolution, and the trend grew 
		in impetus in the mid to late 19th century and early 20th century.  
		Professions were seen as of higher status than the trades and their 
		guilds, but of a similar nature.  Professional status and 
		recognition was being sought by many occupations through this period.  
		The Surveyors Club was formed in London in 1792 and was the precursor to 
		the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) which was founded in 
		1868 (RICS, n.d.).
		Land surveying as an occupation spread throughout the British Empire 
		during the era of colonial development.  While the technical 
		aspects of the occupation were common through the developing areas, some 
		additional skills were added to those relating to measurement as local 
		conditions required.  As land surveyors were often the explorers 
		with mapping expertise of new territories, they arrived early in the 
		settlement schemes.  They had the task of identifying plots of land 
		that had been allocated to the settlers, and often had to lay out 
		pre-planned towns.  Additionally, as towns grew the land surveyors were 
		required to design and supervise the construction of utility services 
		such as roads and drains, and design additions to the planned towns as 
		they grew with the influx of new migrants.  Hence, in many cases 
		skills that were usually the ambit of other professions were acquired, 
		such as town planning and engineering.
		The tools used in this era of land surveying were much the same as 
		those that had been invented or designed in the 100 years around 1600. 
		 Land definition and land ownership were also largely unchanged, 
		although the Torrens system aided the creation of a systematic recording 
		of the rights in land that came with ownership.  Thus it was that 
		the colonial land surveyors also developed expertise in the law relating 
		to rights in land.  Consequently, land surveying, met all of the 
		requirements defined in the literature as prerequisites for an 
		occupation to be recognised as a profession (Coutts, 2017).
		4. THE IMAGE OF THE LAND SURVEYOR
		From talking to many surveyors in several countries, it has become 
		clear  to me that the profession of land surveying has an image problem.  
		The image portrayed, including by many surveyors, is usually a man, 
		although now women are beginning to make a more regular appearance, 
		standing around a device mounted on a tripod.  It does not matter 
		very much whether the device is an optical theodolite, a total station 
		or a GNSS antenna.  The picture is one of someone in outdoor 
		clothing and who is likely to be wearing boots.  Their purpose is 
		unclear although the backpack and GNSS antenna does resonate more with 
		the public than earlier measurement devices.  The image is thought 
		nit to be of someone who is a member of a profession, but some 
		technician or technically qualified person.  Educational 
		institutions often reinforce this image, and some promote the outdoor 
		activity of the land surveyor’s work as an attractive aspect of the 
		profession. 
		Anecdotal evidence suggests that land surveyors often under-sell 
		their work and their contribution to society through their expertise in 
		measurement, and have a tradition of undervaluing their outputs, even to 
		the point of giving them away (Coutts, 2017).  Additionally there 
		is often the complaint that land surveying is not understood by the 
		public. Three questions arise from this view.  Firstly, is it 
		actually true?  Secondly, how much do the public understand of any 
		profession, and thirdly, if the claim is valid who is responsible for 
		changing that perception.  To answer the first question it would be 
		helpful if rigorous research were conducted to test whether or not the 
		perception is correct.  The response to the second question is 
		likely to be inconclusive.  The greater the number of people who 
		have had first-hand dealings with any particular profession, the greater 
		is the likelihood of there being some understanding.
		The answer to the third question is more complicated.  
		Universities have an interest in attracting students to their programmes 
		in order to keep their programmes viable.  Professional 
		institutions have an interest in ensuring that there are enough active 
		professionally qualified practitioners to meet societal demand.  
		The interests of the universities and the professional bodies are 
		therefore aligned.  The problem arises, where there are multiple 
		tertiary programmes, or competing professional societies, in getting 
		them all together and then coordinated to develop a coherent, consistent 
		and communicable message.  New Zealand is fortunate in this respect 
		in that it is one nation (no states or provinces), has one principal 
		professional body, and has one National School of Surveying.  These 
		are considered here to be the principal reasons why New Zealand has an 
		ongoing programme that fills its quota every year.
		Many land surveyors are unhappy with the image that they perceive the 
		public have of their profession, but the question may be asked if this 
		is indeed the public image of the profession.  There are no known 
		studies where this question has been specifically asked and a rigorous 
		answer found.  Is it therefore the self image of the land surveyor 
		that is the more of a problem than the imagined public image of the 
		profession?  It may then be asked that, if the image is faulty then who 
		might take responsibility for changing it and how can this be achieved?  
		The answer to each of these questions comes back to the profession 
		itself.  But first, the professional land surveyors have to improve 
		the image they have of themselves.
		5. THE ARRIVAL OF GEOMATICS
		In 1975 Bernard Dubuisson referred in a scientific paper to a new 
		discipline, geomatique.  It is not clear who first coined the word, 
		but geomatique is translated as “geomatics” and is accepted by the 
		International Standards Organisation.  Little attention appears to 
		have been paid to the term, but it reappeared in Quebec City, Canada in 
		1981.  Michel Paradis “created” the word as an umbrella term to 
		include all methods of acquiring and distributing data.  At this 
		time the term did catch on and spread throughout Canada (Bédard, 2007).
		From Canada it jumped to Australia, where it was ostensibly used to 
		define this “new” discipline which was a collection of new technology 
		used to gather and process data added to the academic discipline of 
		surveying.  The surveying profession was less than enthusiastic 
		about the adoption and use of the term geomatics.  However it is 
		apparent that a more important reason for the adoption of geomatics to 
		define what the universities were doing was its use as a marketing tool, 
		in an attempt to attract more students into struggling surveying 
		courses.  In the long term it has not been successful.  
		Australian schools of surveying are disappearing into engineering 
		schools and parts of the profession have adopted “spatial science” as an 
		umbrella term, but it is unclear if the umbrella includes surveying. 
		 The principal national surveyors’ society, the Surveying and Spatial 
		Sciences Institute, would appear to be unsure.  However, there 
		appears to be a developing preference for names that refer to geospatial 
		rather than spatial science(s).
		The United Kingdom followed Australia in adopting the term geomatics.  
		While many tertiary institutions adopted it in some form, once again, 
		the professional bodies did not. Its use by the profession’s 
		practitioners has been minimal and its use by academia inconsistent.  
		Some consider geomatics to embrace land surveying while others do not.  
		Advocates for its adoption used similar points to those debated in 
		Australia, namely the embracing of new technology and attracting of 
		young people into surveying programmes struggling to remain 
		independently viable.  
		Advocates of the use of geomatics instead of land surveying in the UK 
		seemed unaware that it already had a definition and a meaning.  
		Frequent mention is made in the literature of “being able to make it 
		mean anything”, as if it was had no pre-existing meaning.  An 
		apparently serious argument was made that since it had no meaning it 
		would give those who use it an opportunity to explain what it meant.  
		But then they were already concerned that when they said they were a 
		surveyor they then had to explain that to people!
		The reasons for its adoption do not appear to have been any more 
		successful than in Australia.  In support of changing the name of a 
		profession that had existed under an agreed name for over 400 years, and 
		had existed as an occupation for several millennia, Professor Paul 
		Cross, a proponent of the adoption of geomatics, is quoted as saying “A 
		profes1qsion that cannot even agree a name is unlikely to be taken 
		seriously” (Cross, 1997. p5). 
		It might be noted that one English speaking country, New Zealand, 
		debated and refuted the use of the term geomatics when it was becoming 
		fashionable in the 1980s.  Nevertheless the New Zealand National 
		School of Surveying still continues to fill its 60 allotted spaces each 
		year on a competitive basis, gaining more applications for entry than it 
		can accommodate.  It retains surveying as its name and within its 
		core requirements for a surveying degree, teaches courses in all of the 
		new technologies that geomatics was intended to embrace, all without the 
		need of a new identity.
		6. THE GEOSPATIAL IDENTITY
		There is unrest about the use of geomatics to describe surveying.  
		Practitioners in England, Canada and Australia, despite the wide-spread 
		use of the term have not adopted it to describe their profession.  
		Those coming nearest are the Australians whose professional body was the 
		Spatial Sciences Institute, established in 2003; it changed its name in 
		2009 to the Surveying and Spatial Sciences Institute.  A 
		superficial consideration of the name change would suggest that 
		Surveying, therefore, must not have been considered a spatial science.  
		Nevertheless, those of the land surveying profession, be they in Canada, 
		Australia or the UK still, in the main, proudly refer to themselves as 
		surveyors.
		Coutts and Grant (2016) used the term “geospatial surveyor” in a 
		paper presented at the FIG Working Week in Christchurch.  It is 
		interesting to note that it raised not a single comment.  There are 
		reasonable grounds to suggest, that at least in the English speaking 
		countries, geomatics has not only been ineffective in bringing the 
		changes desired when it was adopted, but it has raised the ire of many 
		practicing surveyors.  The evidence suggests that the use of the 
		term geomatics is diminishing in those countries named above.
		Where, then, does this leave the land surveying profession?    
		The word surveying to describe those who measure aspects of land, 
		particularly its location, dimensions, shape, topography and occupation 
		has had centuries of use and reasonable understanding.  The 
		qualification “land” has been useful and relevant in the past.  
		However the descriptor “land” is now a limiting factor in describing the 
		capabilities of the surveying profession following the evolution and 
		revolution of technology that occurred during the last century.  
		Furthermore, location data gathering, analysis management and the 
		distribution of information are highly valued and growing requirements 
		of the digital age.
		Given that limitation, it is suggested that land surveyors rebrand 
		themselves as geospatial surveyors, a term that is more likely to 
		succeed where the adoption of geomatics has failed.  The term 
		geospatial is already in wide use internationally, and in some places 
		has already begun the takeover of geomatics as well as spatial science.  
		It is also reasonably easy to interpret by the public as it can be 
		related to devices they already have in their pockets.  Never has 
		mapping been so ubiquitous.
		7. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS
		The New Zealand surveying profession was wise not to join the global 
		trend in adopting geomatics in place of surveying or to represent a 
		discipline wider but inclusive of land surveying.  The reasons 
		others adopted the term geomatics were not relevant to the New Zealand 
		profession at the time, namely; the need to find a term broader than 
		surveying to include new technologies, the need to modernize the image 
		of the profession, and the pressing requirement to attract greater 
		numbers of students.
		The reasons geomatics was not necessary are quite simple. Firstly, 
		the Bachelor of Surveying at the University of Otago has continuously 
		evolved to include the new technologies referred to in the original 
		definition of geomatics under the canopy of surveying, namely, remote 
		sensing, photogrammetry and GIS.  Secondly, while not having a high 
		profile, the general public did and do have some understanding of the 
		history and functions of land surveyors in New Zealand, and in 
		particular the qualification of Registered Surveyor were held in high 
		regard by the general public, even if the activities of a professional 
		surveyor were not well understood.  Thirdly, the National School of 
		Surveying at the University of Otago was undergoing growth in its 
		student numbers and entry to its flagship course, the Bachelor of 
		Surveying, the only surveying course in the country leading to 
		professional status, was competitive.  As a consequence the annual 
		intake rose from 40 per year in 1992 to 65 by 2006.
		Geomatics as a term has failed to achieve the stated purposes of its 
		adoption in the United Kingdom, Australia and even in Canada where it 
		originated and was adopted by academia. Neither has it resonated with 
		the public nor with professional surveyors in any of those countries.  
		University programmes in each have largely been absorbed into larger 
		departments, almost exclusively engineering.  In the United Kingdom 
		and Canada the programmes are more commonly branded as Geomatic 
		Engineering.  Not using the word surveying to describe the skill 
		set being offered by universities is viewed now by many as a 
		disadvantage, and some programmes have reintroduced surveying into their 
		publicity, particularly their websites, so as to be findable by search 
		engines (Coutts, 2017).
		Continuing to refer to the profession as “surveying” is important for 
		historic and consistency reasons.  However the qualifier “land” has 
		outlived its usefulness.  Nevertheless some qualifier is necessary 
		to distinguish what historically has been the land surveyor from other 
		types of surveyors e.g. quantity surveyors.  The term “geospatial” 
		is already in use in university programmes, e.g. at RMIT in Melbourne, 
		Australia.  It is becoming more widely used and understood 
		generally as smartphone technology becomes ubiquitous.  The issue 
		is that the “land” descriptor now undersells the capabilities of the 
		land surveyor.  What is more, the need and demand for accurate 
		location data is increasing and will continue to increase as current 
		technologies continue to advance.
		It is not suggested here that there needs to be a sudden adoption of 
		new terminology, nor that institutions will need to change their names, 
		at least in the short term.  Nor is it necessary that changes be 
		made by “statute”.  No one needs to mandate that the new term be 
		used.  It is as much a mindset as anything else.  It can be 
		implemented on business letterheads and cards in an incremental way so 
		that there are no costs in its adoption.
		Furthermore, with some compromises, the term geospatial surveyor can 
		be inclusive of the traditional land surveyor, the technologically 
		advanced land surveyor, and those professional GIS practitioners who 
		work in the geospatial landscape.  International and local 
		definitions already allow for this.  However, all parties need to 
		feel comfortable with the new appellation; that land surveyors are in 
		the geospatial area, and that the appropriate GIS practitioners can feel 
		comfortable being called surveyors.
		REFERENCES
		
			- Ballantyne, Brian. (1996, March). A polemic against 'geomatics': 
			Buttering no parsnips. Survey Quarterly, 5.
 
			- Bédard, Yvan. (2007). "Geomatics": 26 years of history already.
			Geomatica, 61(3), 4. 
 
			- Cooper, M. A. R. (2009). Who did they think they were? or 
			Land Surveyors in Society. Christmas Lectures. Royal 
			Institution of Chartered Surveyors. 
 
			- Coutts, B.J. & Grant, D.B. (2016).  Geospatial surveyors – 
			what are they good for.  Paper presented at the FIG Working 
			Week "Recovery from Disaster", Christchurch, New Zealand.
 
			- Coutts, Brian J.  (2017)  Land Surveying: has 
			technology fundamentally changed the profession.  PhD thesis.  
			University of Otago. (Unpublished).
 
			- Cross, Paul. (1997, Nov/Dec). Paul Cross - explaining geomatic 
			engineering. Surveying World, 6, 3.
 
			- Dilke, O. A. W. (1971). The Roman Land Surveyors: An 
			Introduction to the Agrimensores. Newton Abbot, Devon, UK: 
			David & Charles.
 
			- Dubuisson, Bernard. (1975). Practique de la Photogrammetrie 
			et des Moyens Cartographiques derives des Ordinateurs. (K. J. 
			Dennison, Trans.). Paris: Editions Eyrolles.
 
			- Joseph, George Ghevarughese. (1987). Foundations of Eurocentrism 
			in mathematics. Race and Class (28), 15. doi: 
			10.1177/030639688702800302
 
			- Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors. (n.d.). Retrieved 19 
			July 2013
			
			www.rics.org/nz/about-rics/who-we-are/history-and-mandate/history/
 
			- Usvat, Lilianna. (2013). Medieval Times Mathematics. Mathematics 
			Magazine.
			
			www.mathematicsmagazine.com/Articles/MedievalTimesMathematics.php#.UqUvnuK9LMk
 
		
		BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
		Brian Coutts, is a Senior Lecturer at the New 
		Zealand National School of Surveying and is a professionally qualified 
		surveyor and planner.  He has held the offices of President of the 
		New Zealand Institute of Surveyors (1999-2000), President of the 
		Commonwealth Association of Surveying and Land Economy (2004-07)), Chair 
		of the Cadastral Surveyors Licensing Board of New Zealand (2002-10) and 
		Deputy Head of New Zealand National School of Surveying in (2007-12).  
		He was Chair of the FIG Working Group on Voting Rights (2011/12), Vice 
		Chair of Commission 1 (2012-2014), has been its Chair since 2015 and was 
		the ACCO representative on the FIG Council in 2015/16.