Monday, March 30, 2026

A comprehensive PDF guide for AI deed abstracting and metes-and-bounds land mapping,with usage examples

Here is a 24-page PDF guide with 20 prompts organized into four categories, each with purpose statements, usage examples, and practical tips.

 https://drive.google.com/file/d/1yf_gjmlRhcNjrtEdjzoCNcFTPuCdr5l_/view?usp=sharing

What's Inside

Part A: Core Deed Abstracting (Prompts 1-5) — Full deed abstract, grantor/grantee extraction with relationships, consideration analysis, witness/mark/acknowledgment details, and dower release detection.

Part B: Chain of Title (Prompts 6-10) — Chain-of-title builder, gap analysis, heir and probate tracking, name variant reconciliation, and chronological timeline reconstruction.

Part C: Encumbrances & Legal Interests (Prompts 11-15) — Lien/mortgage extraction, easement and right-of-way identification, restrictive covenants (including Indian Territory alienation restrictions), tax sale and sheriff's deed analysis, and mineral/timber rights extraction.

Part D: Metes-and-Bounds Mapping (Prompts 16-20) — Metes-and-bounds parsing into plottable call tables, unit conversion (chains, poles, varas, arpents), neighbor/adjoiners FAN network mapping, overlay comparison of two descriptions, and Point-of-Beginning locator for modern mapping.

The guide also includes a quick-reference measurement conversion table, a 10-point verification checklist for AI output, and a sources page with clickable links. Every prompt uses [bracketed placeholders] so you can customize them for any state, county, or time period — including Oklahoma/Indian Territory records and colonial-era deeds.

The structured output from Prompt 16 (Metes-and-Bounds Parsing) feeds directly into tools like DeedPlotter AI or Deed Reader Pro for visual plotting. The case study approach draws from the Family Locket deed abstracting workflow using Claude for consistent abstracting across multiple documents

No comments:

Post a Comment