Dataset:GradeOn > Field: secGradeClass

Field Details
: secGradeClass
: NUMBER(6)
: No
: No
: secGradeClass
: NA
: Meters
Basic information about this field
Field Constraints
secGradeClass is constrained by a value list. The table to the right lists the valid values for this field.
Code Value
Ownership & Maintenance
: Data Management Unit
: Bibi Khan
: Phyllis Snider
What section or group in CDOT owns the data in this dataset and who is custodian of the data itself.
Business Rules
:
: Highway Management and Planning
None
: NA
: Yes
: No
: Yes
: No
: No
:
A coordinate system is a grid-based method of specifying locations on the surface of the Earth that is a practical application of a 2-dimensional Cartesian coordinate system. (easting)
:
The Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) coordinate system is a grid-based method of specifying locations on the surface of the Earth that is a practical application of a 2-dimensional Cartesian coordinate system. It is used to identify locations on the earth, but differs from the traditional method of latitude and longitude in several respects. The UTM system is not a single map projection. The system instead employs a series of sixty zones, each of which is based on a specifically defined secant transverse Mercator projection. A position on the Earth is referenced in the UTM system by the UTM zone, and the easting and northing coordinate pair. The easting is the projected distance of the position from the central meridian, while the northing is the projected distance of the point from the equator. Eastings and northings are measured in meters. The point of origin of each UTM zone is the intersection of the equator and the zones central meridian. In order to avoid dealing with negative numbers, the central meridian of each zone is given a false easting value of 500,000 meters. Thus, anything west of the central meridian will have an easting less than 500,000 meters. For example, UTM eastings range from 167,000 meters to 833,000 meters at the equator (these ranges narrow towards the poles). In the northern hemisphere, positions are measured northward from the equator, which has an initial "northing" value of 0 meters and a maximum "northing" value of approximately 9,328,000 meters at the 84th parallel — the maximum northern extent of the UTM zones. In the southern hemisphere, northings decrease as you go southward from the equator, which is given a "false northing" of 10,000,000 meters so that no point within the zone has a negative northing value.
Business rules related to this particular field.
Other Datasets with this Field
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Other datasets that have this field.