with vigor,
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nd promis-
ked within
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1 north-
Ltd. Photo
1 also, and
een photo-
gical facts
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It may be
t from the
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erpretation
(657)
THE O.D.S., A NEW INTERPRETATION STEREOSCOPE
by
R. Roelofs, Delft, Holland.
Of the many links which constitute the photo-reconnaissance, photo-inter-
pretation chain, the weakest Ones are believed by many to fall in the category
of Photographic Interpretation Equipment, Materials and Methods. These are
the approximate words of our present chairman, Commander Colwell, in his
contribution to the excellent report of the International Commission VII. They
evidence the dissatisfaction felt by many photo-interpreters when endeavouring
to ascertain all the information the aerial photographs contain.
Some years ago Mr. Katz of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base depicted the
situation in still stronger words by saying: *this matter of photographic-inter-
Fig. 1. The O.D.S. stereoscope in use for
scanning stereoscopic pictures.
pretation strikes us as being a very much unbalanced situation, wherein we may
take a million dollar airplane, a hundred thousand dollars worth of cameras, a
half dozen rolls of film, one of which (for the K-40 camera) is going to cost
about $ 400... we take off on a very hazardous mission in the sense of military
and social economics... when the photo-interpreter gets around to abstracting
the information he uses a 10 cent magnifying glass..."