30 HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAMMETRY IN THE UNITED STATES
employees engaged in photogrammetric
work. .
The foregoing should not be construed
to mean that mapping was the only use
being made of aerial photos. From the
first, photographs were studied with avid
interest by foresters in other lines of work.
Timber, range, and experiment station
personnel realized that better appraisal
and survey work at lower costs could be
effected by use of pictures. Fire Control
was using aerial photos extensively and
effectively. In 19397 Burk and Wilson of
the California Forest Range Experiment
Station presented results of a vegetative
inventory from aerial photographs, and in
19423 Wieslander and Wilson published an
excellent account of work in connection
with classifying forest and other vegeta-
tion from aerial photos. Moessner, Jensen,
Rogers, Colwell, Garver, and numerous
others have contributed effectively to the
ever-increasing use of aerial photographs.
The use of aerial photographs in the
many activities of the Forest Service is
almost infinite. It is doubtful if any one
government agency or private company
has such varied use for the photos. They
are being used extensively in nearly all
phases of fire control work. No grazing
survey is undertaken without aerial pic-
tures being available. The accuracy of
timber and forest surveys is greatly in-
creased, and the cost cut about 50% over
previous methods, by using photos. Their
use in reconnaissance for road location
work has saved a great deal of time and
money, and experiments in the Alexandria
Mapping Office involving the use of the
Kelsh Plotter for road location have given
very gratifying results.* Recent work on
cadastral surveys, somewhat dormant since
the original work in 1934 and 1935, in-
dicate that improved methods and equip-
ment will effect a substantial saving in
future work of this nature.
Photos have been used in the past few
years for planning and mapping work in
connection with control work on blister
rust, Tussock Moth and other types of
timber infestation. They have been used
for years in wildlife management programs,
for erosion and flood control planning, for
planning and developing recreational and
winter sports areas, for land exchange and
mineral surveys, for law enforcement and
trespass cases, and for dozens of other
related uses. There is scarcely a field job
undertaken by a Forest Service employee
in which aerial photographs cannot be
used to more efficiently perform the work.
Aerial photographs and photogram-
metry have long since proved to be in-
dispensable and valuable tools in the hands
of foresters. Constant improvement in
photogrammetric equipment, techniques,
and processes, together with a definite
personnel training program in the use
thereof, can contribute greatly to even
more efficient and economical Forest
Service work in the future.
In the limited time available for prep-
aration of this “thumbnail” history of
photogrammetry in the U. S. Forest
Service, only the highlights could be
touched upon. A multitude of people have
contributed to the science, and its progress
is indicated by the hundreds of papers
which have appeared in our leading:
scientific publications. It is regretted that
it is not possible to mention all who have
been instrumental in furthering the sci-
ence, and that a complete historical bib-
liography can not be prepared at this time.
REFERENCES
1. Thelen, Rolph, “Aerial Photography and
National Forest Mapping,” Journal of
Forestry, Vol. 17, 515-522, 1919.
2. Minutes of the first U. S. Forest Service
Surveys and Maps Conference, held at Mis-
soula, Montana, 1936.
3. Massie, E. S., “Forest Service Planimetric
Maps,” PHOTOGRAMMETRIC ENGINEERING
Vol. VI, No. 4, 151—155, 1940.
4. Wright, Marshall S., "Aerial Surveys in
Colorado,” The Military Engineer, Vol.
XXV, No. 142, 301-303, July-August 1933.
5. Wright, Marshall S., Region 7 Report of
September 11, 1935, under designation EM-
Surveys, Aerial.
6. King, Jasper E. "The K.E.K. Plotter,"
PHOTOGRAMMETRIC ENGINEERING, Vol. X,
No. 4, 252-260, 1944.
7. Burks, G. F., and Wilson, R. C., "A Vege-
tative Inventory from Aerial Photographs,"
* The Forest Service is using photogrammetry for many phases of road work but has not yet
found a way of setting slope and grade stakes by photogrammetry—T.W.N.