Maine Code § 33-803

Plane coordinates of a point
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The plane coordinate values for a point on the earth's surface, used to express the geographic
position or location of such point in the appropriate zone of this system, must consist of 2 distances
expressed in United States Survey feet and decimal feet or international meters and decimal meters
when using the Maine Coordinate System of 1927, the Maine Coordinate System of 1983 or the Maine
Coordinate System of 2000. One of these distances, to be known as the "x-coordinate" or "Easting
Coordinate," gives the position in an east-and-west direction; the other, to be known as the "y-
coordinate" or "Northing Coordinate," gives the position in a north-and-south direction. These
coordinates must be made to depend upon and conform to plane rectangular coordinate values for the
monumented points of the North American Horizontal Geodetic Control Network as published by the
National Ocean Survey and the National Geodetic Survey, or their successors, and whose plane
coordinates have been computed on the systems defined in this chapter. Any such station may be used
for establishing a survey connection to any of the Maine Coordinate Systems. [PL 2011, c. 126, §4
(AMD).]

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