YOU must determine if, in fact, a legal right-of-way actually exists and is recorded in the county land records. If a legal right-of-way is recorded and the neighbors are trying to close or "destroy" it in some way, you may go to court and obtain an injunction against them requiring them to cease. If any compensable damages occurred, or expenses were incurred, you may bring suit against them for recovery. Remember, if they own the property on which the ROW runs they may do anything on THEIR property they wish just so long as it does not close or unlawfully limit the free passage of those legally entitled to use the ROW.
the stakes are 40 feet apart or 30 feet
40 feet
The stakes should be made of rolled steel 1 inch in diameter. The should be 14-15 inches above the ground with a 3 inch lean. The stakes should be 40 feet apart.
A concrete form is just a box that holds wet concrete in shape until it sets. They are normally wood but I've seen metal forms a lot too. It has to be removable when the concrete hardens, usually by taking it apart. First, find your grade, that's the level you want the concrete to be at when it's finished. Drive some stakes around the area and suspend strings where the edges will be. Drive larger stakes along the strings. Fasten the boards to the stakes with the top edge on grade. Make sure to support it a lot along the board with additional stakes because concrete is very heavy. Add or remove fill in the form until you have the depth you want. Your ready to pour.
Plates move apart on divergent plate boundaries.
True!
divergent boundary
divergent boundary
Yes, the down payment can be cash or land value, which could include building, structures, along with other site enhancements that'll be area of the project property, formerly acquired.
It is one of the meanings of property: characteristic. For example, "it is the property of rural areas that houses are further apart". Nothing really to do with mathematics, there.
they move apart along a divergent plate boundary
Tornadoes damage and destroy property by blowing it apart with extreme winds, striking it with debris, and toppling trees.