The Roots of Photogrammetry?
I am not a surveyor and know almost nothing really of photogrammetry, but I was intrigued when I spotted a very brief piece on what may have been early photogrammetry in a scan of a page from the March, 1924, issue of Popular Mechanics magazine.
This was on the blog Modern Mechanix, which posted the page because it also contained a story, with pictures, on novel iconography of the new (in 1924) Church of St. Christopher, in Paris; iconography that included detailed paintings of the saint protecting the operators of plains, trains, and automobiles.
The next headline down the page, however, caught my eye:
This was on the blog Modern Mechanix, which posted the page because it also contained a story, with pictures, on novel iconography of the new (in 1924) Church of St. Christopher, in Paris; iconography that included detailed paintings of the saint protecting the operators of plains, trains, and automobiles.
The next headline down the page, however, caught my eye:
Camera for Surveying Saves Both Time and LaborI find it helps to read that in the voice of the narrator of a 1920's newsreel.
For registering ground dimensions, a photographic system of surveying, recently devised by a London, England, man, is said to produce results of greater accuracy that the ordinary methods.
Labels: history, land surveying, photography




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