Carbonneau, P. E. and Lane, S. N. and Bergeron, N. E. (2003) 'Cost-effective non-metric close-range digital photogrammetry and its application to a study of coarse gravel river beds.', International journal of remote sensing., 24 (14). pp. 2837-2854.
Abstract
Digital photogrammetry is now increasingly recognized as being a powerful tool in geomorphology. However, the high material costs and skills required by digital photogrammetry may deter non-photogrammetrists from using this technique in their research. This paper demonstrates the use of a close-range digital photogrammetric methodology accessible to non-photogrammetrists and yet capable of yielding good quality topographic information on coarse gravel riverbeds at minimal cost. Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) were derived from 1:165 scale imagery obtained with a 35 mm film SLR camera, a commercial desktop scanner and a softcopy photogrammetry package. Quality assessment based upon independent checkpoints and scaling analysis showed that the precision of the DEMs was consistently less than 10% of the D50 of the bed particles. This translates into sub-centimetric precision. Whilst photogrammetry is presently capable of a better data quality at this scale, quality must be judged with respect to the requirements of the geomorphological applications under consideration. Thus, the methodological simplifications adopted in this research are acceptable in order to make photogrammetry both cost-effective and accessible.
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
Keywords: | Automated DEM generation, Data quality, External reliability analysis. |
Full text: | Full text not available from this repository. |
Publisher Web site: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01431160110108364 |
Date accepted: | No date available |
Date deposited: | No date available |
Date of first online publication: | July 2003 |
Date first made open access: | No date available |
Save or Share this output
Export: | |
Look up in GoogleScholar |