(Askeri) TRAVERS: Yerküre üzerindeki noktalar arasındaki hatların uzunluğunun veya yönlerinin sahra ölçümleriyle veya sahra ölçümlemelerinden elde edildiği ve noktaların mevkilerinin belirlenmesinde kullanıldığı bir yer ölçme metodu
A series of points, with angles and distances measured between, traveled around a subject, usually for use as "control" i.e. angular reference system for later surveying work
born April 13, 1892, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, Eng. died April 5, 1984, Goring-on-Thames, Oxfordshire British air officer. He served in World War I and after the war in various posts in the Royal Air Force (RAF). Nicknamed Bomber Harris, as air marshal and commander of the RAF bomber command (1942), he developed the saturation technique of mass bombing (concentrating clouds of bombers in a giant raid on a single city) that was applied with destructive effect on Germany in World War II
To survey along a path from station to station measuring angles and distances A closed traverse begins and ends at the same point An open traverse begins at a known point and ends at some different point
{i} crossing, passage across; formal denial of a claim made by the other party; zig-zag course (e.g. by a sailboat); protective embankment around a trench; small area separated by a divider
A surveying procedure consisting of the measurement of distance and angles between fixed points (stations) and the mathematical reduction of this data to enable the positions of the stations to be plotted
Something that thwarts, crosses, or obstructs; a cross accident; as, he would have succeeded, had it not been for unlucky traverses not under his control
Sequence of lengths and directions of lines connecting a series of stations, obtained from field measurements, and used in determining positions of the stations
for a directory on a Unix system, this means that the user is allowed to go through this directory, and possibly to directories under it This requires that the user has the execute permission on this directory
If someone or something traverses an area of land or water, they go across it. I traversed the narrow pedestrian bridge. = cross. to move across, over, or through something, especially an area of land or water (traverser, from transversare, from transvertere; TRANSVERSE). a sideways movement across a very steep slope in mountain-climbing
A traverse is a series of consecutive line segments whose lengths and directions are determined by field measurements A closed traverse either closes back upon its starting point, or begins and ends on stations of known positions An open traverse does not close on either itself or a station of known position As such, an open traverse does not provide any means for checking for errors and mistakes Open traverses should generally be avoided If an open traverse must be used, the procedure should be repeated to provide a check of accuracy
Mound(s) of earth or a masonry wall which separate gun emplacements, building entrances, and other positions from enfilading fire The traverse is designed to confine the effects of a bomb fired into the fort
A long walk at height, often connecting several summits Outstanding Scottish traverse is that of the Cuillin Ridge in Skye Can also mean a short section on a hillside where one cuts directly across a steep slope, perhaps using a ledge
(TRAVerse) A geometrical shape that the surveyor follows by placing and occupying points on the ground and measuring the distances and angles between the points The purpose of the traverse is to help determine the accuracy and precision of the measurement process (traVERSE) The physical act of measuring the geometrical shape