3
Introduction
The last few years have seen a very considerable ex-
tension of photogrammetric practice and a marked
improvement in its quality, in Czechoslovakia. Photo-
grammetric methods — that is up-to-date methods
permitting automated production — are employed as
a matter of principle in medium-scale mapping, and
the application of universal plotters is the basic meth
od of large-scale mapping. Photogrammetry also takes
a prominent place in single-purpose mapping (for
road- and railway-construction) and special work of
other but topographic nature. Recently much interest
is being taken in the interpretation of aerial photo
graphs for various fields of science and technology;
for the time being, this province remains off the main
track of photogrammetric activities in Czechoslovakia.
The representation of Czechoslovak photogram
metry in the International Photogrammetric Society
has undergone a change, in the period 1964 to 1968.
Until 1966, the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic was
represented by the Central Office for Geodesy and
Cartography, whereas since January 1 st , 1967, the
Czechoslovak member of the S. I. P. is the Photo
grammetric Department of the Section for Geodesy
and Cartography, Czechoslovak Scientific and Tech
nological Society. All photogrammetric experts in
Czechoslovakia are members of this organisation, and
this national report summarizes their main activities
and results achieved in the years 1964 to 1968.
1. Aerial Photographs
Great efforts were made to improve the quality
of aerial photographs which are the basic working
stock of photogrammetry. The transition to photo
grammetric large-scale survey and the utilization of
aerial photographs for various special purposes ne
cessitated the adjustment of the techniques of both
aerial photography and the processing of aerial pho
tographs in the laboratory.
11-14 aircraft, especially adjusted for aerial pho
tography, superseded other types of aircraft which
were less suited to the purpose. The cameras remain
ed unaltered, on the whole: The MRB 21/1818 ca
mera manufactured by Zeiss Jena and RC5 or RC5a
cameras by Wild (f = 115, 152 and 210 mm) pre
dominate.
During the period covered by this report, ex
tensive investigations into the quality of black-and-
white aerial photographs were concluded, and new
methods of taking photographs and processing them
in the laboratory were introduced. The potentialities
inherent in the optical systems of the plotting ma
chines and the demands they make on the semantic
quality of the picture are fully considered when the
photograph is being taken and processed. This pro
cedure has been facilitated by a new set of instru
ments introduced into industrial practice. Particular
mention should be made of the new Czechoslovak
type LF-2 aerial photometer which permits the max
imum and minimum brightness on the ground to be
measured from the aircraft. The measured data are
fed into a new aerial sensitometric computer. The
optimum variant of the laboratory process for a given
film is thus determined objectively and the exposure
values are determined to correspond to the effective
sensitivity. The negatives are developed in a newly
designed automatic aerial-film processor (for nega
tives up to 240mm wide). Electronic printers are
used to make diapositives of all films. The feedback
embodied in the sensitometric computation governs
the entire procedure and integrates the whole set of
apparatus into a harmonically working system, feed
ing the plotting machines with diapositives of a con
stant quality.
Last year we have started to introduce — on a
pilot-plant scale — aerial colour photography for
photogrammetric plotting. A newly developed semi
automatic colour printer for aerial films makes colour
photography an economic proposition. A negative
positive system and Czechoslovak Fomacolor material
is employed. Film diapositives are used for plotting.
The first results seem to suggest that colour photo
graphy will make an essential contribution to photo
grammetry.
2. Mapping
Having completed the photogrammetric oper
ations involved in topographical mapping on the
scale of 1:10,000, our surveying service now concen
trates on the maintenance of those maps, based on
aerial photographs, as well as on large-scale map
ping; the scales — 1:1000, 1:2000, 1:5000 — de
pend upon the economic importance of the surveyed
territory. In practice, the scale of 1:5000 is used in
preponderantly agricultural regions, and 1:2000 or
1:1000 in industrial regions or districts where large-
scale economic development is intended, as well as
in towns and large settlements or areas of intended
urban development. These maps, the “Technical and
Economic Maps” as they are called, are to meet the
requirements of all the branches of the national eco
nomy, and in particular the needs of planning and
capital investment. Photogrammetry using universal
plotters is the main surveying method for making
those maps.
In order to reduce the cost of surveying, two
new methods of analytical aerotriangulation — one
for strip -- and the other for block-triangulation —
were devised in Czechoslovakia, in recent years. Both
methods are gaining ground in aerotriangulation for
mapping on the scales of 1:5000 and 1:2000.
Photogrammetric plotting is mostly performed
on data plotters made by Carl Zeiss of Jena, the
main types being stereometrographs and siereoplani-
graphs fitted with coordimeter recording devices. Wild
machines A5, A7 and A8 with EK3 and EK5 regis
tering devices are also employed. The usual image
scales are
1:16,000 for 1:5000 maps,
1: 9000 for 1:2000 maps, and
1: 5000 for 1:1000 maps.
Before the flight, the pass points, some points of
the geodetic field, points for supplementary survey of
unplotted spaces, and some detail points are marked
for more precise definition and higher quality of
photogrammetric plotting.