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Published byLucile Pothier Modified over 6 years ago
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Aerial photography All (most) of our base data map layers have come from air photos
… imap
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Traditional surveying: triangulation
Theodolite Triangulation station Geodetic station
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Early days: Boston, from Tethered Balloon (1860)
Development of aerial photography before airplanes
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Air photos for reconnaisance from fighter planes and pigeons
Word War I: Air photos for reconnaisance from fighter planes and pigeons Balloons and kites were easy to shoot down, but pigeons were not. Small cameras were attached to the birds and a timer was set to take pictures every 30 seconds as it flew
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Oblique photos from mountain peaks
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Early topographic mapping from mountain peaks: Canadian Rockies, 1890
Photo-topography led by Edouard Deville, was used until 1950 Early topographic mapping from mountain peaks: Canadian Rockies, 1890
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Since 1945, all our topographic mapping is done from aerial photography:
Air photos enabled a huge reduction in fieldwork costs, and an increase in how quickly and accurately large areas could be mapped Athabasca Glacier, 1958
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Photos are not ‘planimetric’: there are distortions
“Tip, tilt and swing” Relief distortion Radial distortion
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There are two distinct branches of aerial photography:
Photogrammetry: "the science of obtaining reliable measurements from photos" Photo interpretation: "the identification and extraction of meaning of objects" Photogrammetry needs a minimum of 5 known point locations per photo
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Accessing air photos
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Index maps 1936-1950 microfiche, >1950 paper
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Flight Reports organized by year
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Flight map 1970_B-006-FI-70_16000
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Photo library – Victoria, BC
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Individual photos
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Stereoscopes – 3D imagery
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Stereo – 3D to create elevations
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ORTHOPHOTOS Once corrected, and georeferenced, photos can be used for topographic mapping and as a mapping layer, with map data overlain on top. A photograph that has been corrected and is 'planimetrically correct' is known as an orthophoto (e.g. as in google maps, pgmap or BC- imap ).
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Map layer features are identified using:
Image interpretation Map layer features are identified using: Shape Pattern Size Tone Colour Shadow Texture Site Time
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Provincial photography is generally redone about every 10+ years
City photography more frequently: 3-5 years PG
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Time sequence, PGmap: http://pgmap.princegeorge.ca/pgmap.html
Aerial photos still use film, but these are then scanned and input into digital photogrammetric software for processing. Photos can be purchased as scanned TIF files
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Digital photography: Terrasaurus aerial photography, Williams Lake
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