Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byValerie Reeves Modified over 9 years ago
1
Digital Close Range Photogrammetry of Soil Excavation Surfaces
Jared M. Shaffer GIMS Specialist Ohio Department of Agriculture 2015 Ohio GIS Conference September , 2015 | Hyatt Regency Columbus| Columbus, Ohio
2
Digital Close Range Photogrammetry of
Soil Excavation Surfaces for 3D Modeling Jared M. Shaffer GIMS Specialist Ohio Department of Agriculture 2015 Ohio GIS Conference September , 2015 | Hyatt Regency Columbus| Columbus, Ohio
3
Tania D. Burgos-Hernández
Brian K. Slater, PhD Assistant Director and Associate Professor The Ohio State University, School of Environment and Natural Resources Tania D. Burgos-Hernández PhD Student
4
Digital Close Range Photogrammetry
“The art and science of obtaining precise mathematical measurements and three-dimensional (3D) data from two or more photographs” Digital Photogrammetry Expanded EM spectrum, new operational scales 3D Measurement and Modeling (3DMM) software Close Range Photogrammetry (CRP) Object to sensor distance of < 300m
5
DCRP Approaches for Soil Images
Digital photogrammetry can be significantly simpler and less expensive than laser scanning, and the quality of 3D models created has been shown to be comparable (Aguilar et al, 2009) Stereography Multiple overlapping photos are taken at different angles or orientations 3D synthesized from parallax depth relationships in the images can be accessed via triangulation Focus Stacking (Extended Depth of Field) multiple photographs taken at different focal distances from an object 3D synthesized from depth of field (using focal acuity contrasts between photographs)
6
Stereography Object points appear at slightly different positions on multiple photographs (image planes). Software is used to triangulate bundles of focused observation rays to create 3D point clouds to represent object surfaces and shapes. Aguilar et al., 2005
7
Stereography – Dense Surface Modeling
For accurate 3D models (e.g. Dense Surface Modeling), camera is moved parallel to mean object surface, and adjacent photographs should have at least 60% overlap Matthews, 2008
8
Focus Stacking Successive images are focused on object planes at different distances from image sensor, and exhibit narrow zones of in- focus pixels. Software identifies in-focus pixels from multiple images and combines them to reconstruct a fully focused image. 3D surface can be generated. Berejnov, 2009
10
Some Applications Archeology Architecture Forensics Stockpiles
Example application: Soil excavation volume and bulk density
11
Bulk Density Fundamental soil physical property
Proxy for other properties that may be less easily estimated (e.g. pore space) Commonly used to convert gravimetric measurements and concentrations to volumetric or areal quantities (e.g. soil carbon) Can be challenging to measure in some soils
13
Objective Compare bulk density measurements from soil pit horizons using conventional methods (core and clod), and from DCRP derived soil volume Site: Miamian silt loam, Madison Co., Ohio
14
DCRP Workflow Photography Equipment:
35mm DSLR camera 24, 50, 60 mm macro lenses Tripod and slider bar for positioning Sequential overlapping photographs
18
DCRP Workflow Processing Software: EOS Systems Inc. Photomodeler
Camera calibration DSM Model building 2-30 minutes Scaling & Editing Volume measurement
25
To do Conclusions More soils and situations, uncertainty
Before and after models Measurements from focus-stacked models Printing Conclusions DCRP is a useful technique for soil profile visualization Inexpensive alternative to laser scanning for volume and shape-based measurements
26
Thank You Questions?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.