“…Until now, GPS has been used for a wide-range geodetic/geomatics studies, such as deformation monitoring, precise navigation, geodetic networks, cadastral applications, hydrographic surveys, geographical information systems (GIS), photogrammetric studies based on kinematic GPS, terrestrial-mobile-airborne LIDAR applications, remote sensing, unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) systems, early warning system configurations for detecting natural disasters such as earthquakes, landslides, meteorological studies, which require high precision positioning information (Ocalan et al, 2016). As commonly known, GPS enables to estimate threedimensional precise positioning, navigation and timing facilities (Hofmann-Wellenhof et al, 2008;Gao, 2018;Erdogan et al, 2018;Zhou et al, 2019). The improvement in accurate positioning is an ongoing issue that mostly deals with modeling the error sources.…”