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TorontoNeverSkeets t1_j29am3w wrote

They’re surveying monuments. Used for horizontal and vertical location. USGS has a database that would contain this monument’s lat/lon SPC etc.

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keyjan t1_j29bxq4 wrote

You’ll see them for other buildings, utilities, etc. What Toronto said.

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V_T_H t1_j29e3is wrote

I don’t think it’s referring to “Metro” like “the Metro”, I think it’s referring to “Metro” like “Metropolitan Police Department” does. It’s referring to the city and their land survey group, not the public transportation.

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WaterBubbly t1_j29nq82 wrote

Literally has information upon it to help you determine what it is

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AngelsGoHome t1_j29oluk wrote

I think they just might be "the Metro" survey pins. It seems the placing agency labels their pins (e.g., USGS) which helps identify the owner.

Metro obviously has critical infrastructure around and in between stations.

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namico2000 t1_j2a3bg5 wrote

Yes, the exact location of the marker was recorded when it was put in, the X, Y, and Z (elevation) coordinates. They use it as a control to measure from. You might see things like this, which are temporary measuring targets, periodically. They're really important for having a baseline to go from to figure out if things have shifted/moved over time.

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the_real_dmac t1_j2a744q wrote

Much of the metro’s miles of tunnels were constructed using cut & cover, digging down from the surface, pouring concrete and laying steel, then covering it back up. (Not the deep stations along the redline, those were bored into bedrock). Disrupt that much soil and there will be compaction that occurs years later, and that can damage infrastructure built above. So metro monitors surface elevations around tunnels for that problem.

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XComThrowawayAcct t1_j2a8zkm wrote

The survey marker serves as a verified control point. When on site, it’s the one point you know it’s location to within acceptable tolerances. Everything else on site — everything — is measured trigonometrically relative to that point.

(These are not used anymore because we have GPS now. It provides a virtual survey marker almost anywhere, any time. We are living in the future.)

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SeattleCardboard t1_j2aojjj wrote

You'd have to expand on that. I would say the main use of a survey marker is for a surveyor/contractor/engineer to have as a control point. As mentioned by others it gives you an x,y,z based off of a known datum that you can use as a reference point.

The tree is 100' west of this survey marker and 10' higher. We know that the survey marker is at 10000,10000,100 then the tree would be at 9900,10000,110.

That's an easy example and what I would say is their most common use.

When you reference changing elevation that sounds like a high water mark, which is not what is shown in OPs picture.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_water_mark

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Survey_marker

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TechByDayDjByNight t1_j2by1r2 wrote

Looks like survey level points.

There's registery that marks the elevation point if these so when someone does a survey they start at a marker and measures tge difference in elevation surrounding areas are compared to it

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DodgingTrains t1_j2by3zz wrote

The A06 on it indicates that this picture was taken near Van Ness.

Can the OP confirm?

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No-Tie5914 t1_j2d64ah wrote

We are the control group and the survey is on us 😂

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