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A lot of surveyors have their professional engineering(PE) license, which is the only way one can legally sign documents as an engineer. Surveying itself would not require a degree although I am sure it is preferred considering their are geodetic degrees offered at a lot of universities. A lot of surveyors also have to do the designing of foundations and all that which a lot of times ties in with civil engineering.
The job seems fairly in demand. I mean when you see anything being constructed there is surveyors.
Quote: Tangerines said: Do you survey? I like surveying.
Not in the sense that I use a theodolite for surface contour mapping, but I do other sorts of "surveys" such as ecological diversity sampling, point-source groundwater pollution flow mapping and groundwater potentiometric contouring. It's pretty fun