DESCRIPTIONS Surveying and Mapping SUR 3101 Basic Surveying and Mapping. F,S,SS. Credits: 3; Prereq: MAC 3311. Angle, distance and evaluation measurement. Application to engineering, boundaries, topography, forestry, and construction. Error theory. Horizontal and vertical curves. SUR 3202 Construction Surveying. F. Credits: 1 A survey of equipment and methods used in laying out construction projects, transit, tape, laser, level, bat- ter boards, grade stakes, tunnelling. SUR 3322 Introduction to Mapping Credits: 2 History of mapping, surveying of mapping instruc- ments and methods, introduction to digital mapping, practical applications. SUR 3331 Photogrammetry. S. Credits: 2; Prereq: MAC 3311. Photo interpretation and basic measurements. Geometry of vertical photographs. Mapping from photographs. Remote sensing. SUR 3331L Photogrammetry Lab. S. Credits: 1; Coreq: SUR 3331 Practical projects in photogrammetry, photo measure- ments, mapping, GIS integration. SUR 3403 Land Surveying Principles. S. Credits: 3; Prereq: SUR 3640, REE 3043. Land boundaries, comers, areas; writing land descrip- tions, identification of land parcels; legal principles of boundary location, the government land survey system. SUR 3501 Geodetic and Control Surveying. S. Credits: 3; Prereq: SUR 3101 Geodetic instrumentation, azimuth determination by astronomy, geodetic leveling, geodetic coordinate sys- tems, plane projections. SUR 3501L Geodetic Sureveying Lab Credits: 1; Coreq: SUR 3501. Geodetic instrumentation, electronic data collector, geodetic astronomy, coordinate conversions. SUR 3520 Measurement Sciences. S. Credits: 4; Prereq: MAC 3312, STA 3032. Theory of measurement errors. Error propagation. Variance and covariance. Polynomial curve fitting. Regression analysis. Correlation. Lease squares adjust- ments. SUR 3640 Surveying Computations. E. Credits: 2; Coreq: SUR 3101. The principles of geometry applied to surveying com- putations. Computer methods. SUR 4201 Route Geometrics. F,S,SS. Credits: 2; Prereq: SUR 3101, Senior standing. Geometric design of transportation systems. Computer applications. Comprehensive design pro- ject. Spiral curves, superrelevation theory, earthwork analysis. SUR 4305 Marine Surveying and Mapping. F. Credits: 2; Prereq: Senior standing. Methods of positioning points near shore and in open ocean, depth measurements, tide measurements. SUR 4350 Photogrammetric Geometronics. F. Credits: 3; Prereq: SUR 3331, 3501. Stereographic mapping. Analytic control extension. Mapping from satellite imagery. Terrestrial mapping. SUR 4381 Remote Sensing Credits: 3; Prereq: senior standing. Remote sensing systems, ground truthing, image clas- sification systems, mapping applications, applications in plant and animal science, urban planning, engineer- ing, geology, integration into geographic information systems. SUR 4430 Land Surveying Practice. S. Credits: 3; Prereq: SUR 3521, 3403. A study of land survey practice; the lot survey; the sectional survey; the water boundary survey; office and business practices; professional standing. SUR 4451 Cadastral Information. F. Credits: 1; Prereq; CGS 3422. Methods of constructing a multipurpose computer cadastre of position-related information. SUR 4462 Subdivision Design. S. Credits: 3; Prereq: SUR 4201 or SUR 4381 or equiva- lent. Design of a medium-sized subdivision, master plan development, physical development considerations, legal requirements, comprehensive project, mock pre- sentation, platting. SUR 4530 Geodesy. Credits: 3; Prereq: SUR 3520. Introduction to geometric and physical geodesy, ellip- soids, geodetic lines, computation of position, gravity, coordinate systems. SUR 4531 Geodetic Positioning Credits: 3; Prereq: SUR 4530 Satellite geodesy, orbit parameters, GPS observation, vector analysis, networking. SUR 4620 Geographic Information Systems Credits: 4; Prereq: SUR 3101 or consent of instructor. GIS concepts, surveying and mapping input in GIS development, comparison of GIS systems, applica- tions in the natural and physical sciences, engineering, planning. SUR 4905 Special Problems in Land Surveying. F,S,SS. Credits:1 to 3 Special problems or projects in the student's major field of study. SUR 4912 Senior Project. F,S.SS. Credits: 2; Prereq: Senior standing. Laboratory, equipment, or literature investigations of surveying problems and concepts of current interest resulting in a written work. (Takes two consecutive terms to complete course.) SUR 4949 Co-op Work Experience. F,S,SS. Credits: Iff; Prereq: EG classification. Transportation Engineering TTE 4004 Transportation Engineering. F,S. Credits: 3; Prereq: EGM 3400, SUR 3101 Survey of transportation modes; planning, design, operation of transportation systems; costs and benefits of transportation systems. TTE 4811 Physical Design of Transportation Elements. F,S. Credits: 3; Prereq: SUR 3101, CGN 3501. EG classifi- cation only. Drainage, soils, embankments, fabrics, stabilization, flexible and rigid pavement design, resurfacing, new developments, material control, bridge inspection and repair maintenance. TTE 4824 Transportation Facility Design. S. Credits: 3; Prereq: TTE 4004 or TTE 4811. EG classi- fication only. Design and traffic considerations of transportation projects involving facility sizing, functional design, and layout of intersections; non-intersections and/or terminal locations. GRADUATE COURSES Please refer to the Graduate Catalog for graduate course listings. INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF 1992-93 Schmeling, G.L., Chair; Dickison, S.; Eaverly, M.; Hartigan, K.; Miller, D.G.; Sussman, L.; Wagman, R.; Young, D. Undergraduate Coordinator: M.A. Eaverly Graduate Coordinator: D.A. Miller Office: Dauer 3C (392-2075) THE MAJOR: An undergraduate major in Classical Studies is interdisciplinary in nature with an emphasis on ancient Greek, Latin, or a combination. An undergraduate is required to complete either a) 6 credits in Ancient Greek or Latin above the 1000 level; or b) 10 credit hours of the beginning sequence in both ancient Greek and Latin. In addition there is a require- ment of 18 credits at the 2000 level or above (from any department) which deal with the ancient world. Students interested in a concentration in classical archaeology or classical studies or students with an interest in majoring should consult the undergraduate coordinator as soon as possible. HONORS: To graduate with honors a student must attain a 3.5 overall upper-division average. For high or highest honors a student must also complete a special project or thesis approved as honors work. In cases where the thesis or project is of exceptional merit, the department may recommend to the Dean that high honors be awarded. THE MINOR: An undergraduate minor in Classics consists of 5 courses (15 hours) with a grade of C or better. Three of these courses (9 hours) must be taken at the 3000 level or higher. For further informa- tion consult the department. OVERSEAS STUDY: The Classics Department participates in many programs of study overseas, par- ticularly in Italy and Greece. A student may study for the summer, one semester or the whole academic year but is encouraged to contact the Undergraduate Coordinator well in advance of going to Italy or Greece. GENERAL EDUCATION: Courses in General Education are a primary concern of the Classics Department, and senior faculty only are assigned to teach them. Classics belong in the education of every American because they contain a unique fund of stimu- lating and important ideas, exercise mental skills and the imagination, sharpen awareness of the complexities of a nation's culture, and underlie America's most cher- ished institutions and values. Classics are fundamental- ly civilizing. For these reasons, Classics support the most basic goal of education in America, to produce knowledgeable, productive, and thinking citizens. COURSES: There are no prerequisites for the CLA or CLT courses (except for CLA/CLT 4905). The language courses in Classical Greek, Modem Greek, and Latin after the initial 1120 level have very specific prerequisites as listed which students must observe. Classical and Ancient Studies (All courses indicated CLA or CLT are taught in English) CLA 1100 The Glory that was Greece. F. Credits: 3; Prereq: None. A broad cultural view of the classical Greek world. Greek sources read in translation. (I, L) CLA 1120 The Grandeur that was Rome. S. Credits: 3; Prereq: None. Provides a multi-faceted introduction to the culture of Rome. Primary source material read in translation. (I, L) tt Grading is on S-U basis only.