Anyone have a Section map for Township 9N, Range 14W in Sabine Parish?

Looking for a Section map for Township 9N, R14W in Sabine Parish. On the GeoCommunicator.gov website it has what should be T9N, R14W labeled as T10N, R15W and it doesn't overly lay it with the sections. Do any of you have a section map of that area? Trying to find a piece of property.

 

Thanks much.

 

 

Views: 809

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Found what I needed here: http://www.dotd.la.gov/planning/mapping/home.aspx

Click the "Accept" button for a list of maps.

Just in case any of you are looking for something similar. Good find.

FYI ...GeoCommunicator.gov was wrong the way it had it formatted. Pays to double check maps. :-)
Great Maps! Thanks!
Thanks ...and You're welcome! :-)
This is actually a complicated question. Look up Public Land Survey System (PLSS) on Google and Wiki.

Most of the country is divided into townships, ranges and sections to give 1 square mile sections. Some parts of Louisiana were already divided up before the US took over and started dividing up the Louisiana landscape. Some parts of Louisiana are not divided up according to PLSS. Your part of Sabine parish is one of these areas.

Even though your area is really not marked out into township, range, and section
(TRS), some things are done with a "pseudo" PLSS section number laid out according to how they would be laid out if it was done with PLSS. You may find more than one TRS designation for your area. One data source may list your area as something like T9N, R14W, S39, and something else may list it as T9N, R14W, S10.
You're right Mac. Another one that can be confusing is Natchitoches Parish. All shapes and sizes. Interesting though. There's history there. :-)
Mac, you bring up an interesting point. I've noted many maps drop TRS designations for a significant portion of land in central to west Sabine Parish. There is only a line running from northwest to southeast. Starts up in DeSoto Parish and runs to just south and west of Belmont in Sabine, and then turns west all the way to Toledo Bend. I'd always understood the lines represented the boundaries of one of the old Spanish Land Grants. Do you know if there's any truth to this? What caught my attention a year or so ago was the fact comments made by lease agents seemed to indicate they were using the supposed land grant line as the cut off for leasing. That is, they wouldn't go west of it. Of course, they've now moved beyond that. But, should there be any significance attached to the presence of the land grant line, if that's what it is? Thanks for your comment...
Most of that is in past my depth. One thing I've noticed is that the "bogus" section numbers have numbers higher than 36, even if there's only one or two within the township and range in question. "Real" PLSS section numbers only go as high as 36.

I presume it's some sort of land division done before the US took over in Louisana. It could be French or Spanish.

Learn to use the township and section overlays on the SONRIS interactive maps. The topo map overlays (Maps 1:24,000) are also quite useful. The SONRIS site is actually quite useful for non mineral related mapping questions.

RSS

Support GoHaynesvilleShale.com

Blog Posts

The Lithium Connection to Shale Drilling

Shale drilling and lithium extraction are seemingly distinct activities, but there is a growing connection between the two as the world moves towards cleaner energy solutions. While shale drilling primarily targets…

Continue

Posted by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher) on November 20, 2024 at 12:40

Not a member? Get our email.

Groups



© 2024   Created by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher).   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service