You must be working in the Texas Panhandle or West Texas! The rest of Texas is a real mess.......

1) The only way I have found to do this is to draw a line down each side of the section.
2) Find the midpoint of the north, south east and wast section line.
3) Draw the quarter section bisector lines.
4) Do the same thing for each of the 1/2 mile section lines and find the midpoint.
5) Draw the quarter-quarter lines.
6) Finally draw the 16 quarter-quarter sections and label them.

You might have to find the midpoint of line by using the two arc bisection method. (Enhancement request: add snap to line midpoint).

This method makes several assumptions that the section lines are EXACTLY 5280 feet long. Your original post mentions that each section is more than 640 acres, so right off, the section lines are longer than 5280 feet. But the above method bisects the lines which is how the original land surveyor probably located the 1/4-1/4 section points. I would suggest that the PLSS that was provided by Texas is correct (as it will ever be), so just bisect the edge lines to get the 16-40 acre 1/4-1/4 sections.

I hope your area in Texas wasn't divided into Lots around the edges to make up for Townships that were squeezed when they were laid out east-west. Lots were added around the township edges to get the north-south lines to line back up because of the earth curvature.

You might go look at another State like Nevada and download a PLSS for a county and take a look at the shapefiles the BLM distributes and what is involved and available there. Google "blm plss".

The following should probably be another question but have you done a metes and bounds using vara for a distance measure? A vara is 33-1/3 inches in length. How do you enter varas and end up drawing a line in UTM-14 meters in QGIS?

Hope this helps.

J.O. Williams



On 03/24/2015 04:51 PM, G. Allegri wrote:
I don't know if a tool already exists but a script could be a good choice. For each polygon calculate the 16 vertices of the new quarters polygons and copy the source attributes, right?

giovanni

2015-03-24 21:56 GMT+01:00 Ross Easterling <rosseast2...@yahoo.com <mailto:rosseast2...@yahoo.com>>:

    Greetings!

    I have a land survey,  from the Texas State Land Commission,  that
    has rectangular sections that are all over 640 acres.

    I would like to make a subdivision on some of those sections i.e.
    NE4, W2.  I'd like the quarter sections, or subdivisions, to be
    visible and have attributes after I make them.

    I really don't know where to start.

    Ross



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