Aerial Photography and GeographyNo abstract is available for this article.doi:10.1080/03736245.1966.10559410DaviesW. J.South African Geographical Journal Being A Record of the Proceedings of the South African Geographical Society
Aerial photography can also be used forscientific purposes, such as tracking the spread of wildfires, or measuring how much water has been absorbed into the ground from rainfall. Whereas for scientific studies like climate change, it can be a gauge for measuring the rise of sea levels and even...
(Physical Geography) the process of making measurements from photographs, used esp in the construction of maps from aerial photographs and also in military intelligence, medical and industrial research, etc photogrammetric adj ˌphotoˈgrammetrist n Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged...
2. done in or from the air: aerial photography; an aerial survey. 3. inhabiting or frequenting the air: aerial creatures. 4. operating on a track or cable above the ground: an aerial ski lift. 5. reaching far into the air; lofty: aerial spires. 6. unsubstantial; visionary: aerial fa...
Torrado, in International Encyclopedia of Human Geography, 2009 Aerial Photographs Aerial photography, generally flown from an airplane, is still widely used in the creation of topographic maps worldwide, and represents a relatively cheap and accessible data source. Photography can provide black-and-...
Geografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical GeographyRasmussen LA and Krimmel RM (1999) Using vertical aerial photography to estimate mass balance at a point... LA Rasmussen,RM Krimmel - 《Geografiska Annaler》 被引量: 58发表: 1999年 Cameras and settings for aerial surveys in the geosciences: Opti...
The Cambridge University Collection of Aerial Photography (CUCAP) is the result of airborne survey campaigns which were started in 1947 by the pioneering JK St Joseph. Since then the collection has grown to almost 500,000 images of obliques and verticals in black and white, colour and infra-...
National Geography Standardsaerial photographyGeoliteracy is a necessary skill for the twenty-first century. By collaborating with K-12 educators, geographic information librarians can play an important role in geoliteracy initiatives as well as gain knowledge and experience to benefit their home ...
aerial photography A vertical aerial photograph. Various types of aerial photographs. A photographic print or picture of an object, or of a source of radiation, on the earth's surface, developed from a film previously exposed in an airborne vehicle. In narrower terms, it is the act of taking...
Soil Geography and Landscape Group, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands Julian Helfenstein Agroecology and Environment, Agroscope, Zurich, Switzerland Julian Helfenstein Thünen Institute of Biodiversity, Johann Heinrich Von Thünen Institute-Federal Research Institute for Rural Areas, Forestry, ...