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., &amp; 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