UCLouvain
UCLouvain
2078.1/thesis:27680
SfM photogrammetry for
GeoArchaeology
Cucchiaro
Sara
Cucchiaro, Sara
aut
University of Padova
Fallu
J. Daniel
Fallu, J. Daniel
aut
UiT The Artic University of Norway
Zhao
Pengzhi
Zhao, Pengzhi
aut
UCLouvain
0000-0001-6675-7338
Waddington
Clive
Waddington, Clive
aut
Archaeological Research Services Ltd
Cockcrof
David
Cockcrof, David
aut
Archaeological Research Services Ltd
Tarolli
Paolo
Tarolli, Paolo
aut
University of Padova
Brown
G. Antony
Brown, G. Antony
aut
UiT The Artic University of Norway
FT-C01
2020
Anglais
en
The use of remote-sensing (RS) data, from imaging to scanning, has now become an integral and routine part of geoarchaeological studies. Even in the early days of aerial photographic imagery, it was realized that this technology could, under different light and ground conditions, reveal significant subsurface information, particularly in arable lands through so-called “crop marks” (Barber, 2011). In addition, site recording (or planning) was routinely augmented by high-resolution, oblique photography from extendable poles, or photographic towers (Fussell, 1982). This offered some three-dimensional (3D) capability from stereo pairs, but this was limited and digital photogrammetry has only really advanced with the advent of digital single-lens reflex (DSLR) cameras and sufficient computing power (Doyon et al., 2019)
book
Remote Sensing of Geomorphology
9780444641779
p. 183-201
ELSEVIER
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/340699651_SfM_photogrammetry_for_GeoArchaeology
doi:10.1016/B978-0-444-64177-9.00006-0
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/thesis:27680
hdl:2078.1/thesis:27680
2078.1/thesis:27680
2020-10-06T15:00:58Z
2024-04-16T21:04:43Z
Cucchiaro, S., Fallu, J. D., Zhao, P., Waddington, C., Cockcrof, D., Tarolli, P., & Brown, G. A.. (2020). <i>SfM photogrammetry for
GeoArchaeology</i>. ELSEVIER. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-444-64177-9.00006-0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess