The preliminary plan may be drawn on tracing
paper with pencil. The plan shall be at a scale of at least one inch
equals 100 feet and shall show the following information:
A. Subdivision name, boundaries, North point, date, scale,
locus, legend and the title "Preliminary Plan."
B. Names and addresses of record owner, applicant and
designer, engineer or surveyor.
C. Location and names of all abutters, as determined
from the most recent tax list.
D. The names, approximate locations and widths of all
adjacent streets or ways, whether public or private, within 300 feet
of the proposed subdivision.
E. The proposed system of roadways and drainage, including
existing natural waterways, in a general manner.
F. Proposed lot lines, with approximate areas and dimensions.
G. Proposed recreation areas and easements.
H. The topography of the land and immediate vicinity
shown in two-foot contours based on the Sea Level Datum of 1929, the
National Geodetic Vertical Datum. The surveyor who prepares the plan
shall certify on the plan that the contours were drawn from elevations
measured on the ground or taken by photogrammetric methods. The bench
marks used shall be identified.
I. Site features, such as buildings, ponds, streams,
coastal banks, wetlands and areas subject to seasonal flooding.
J. The size and shape of the applicant's remaining land,
if less than all of the applicant's land is being subdivided. (Such
information may be shown as an insert, on a scale of not less than
one inch equals 200 feet).