322
W. TF. Olive: Tonal
Lineaments on the
Aerial Photograph.
quelques levers de faible étendue ont été réalisés en diverses régions de France.
La cadence à laquelle sont établies les cartes photogéologiques est de l’ordre de
20 000 km 2 par mois. Le prix de revient du kilomètre carré varie en fonction de
l’échelle des cartes demandées et des difficultés locales d’observation et d’inter
prétation. Il est en moyenne de 500 Frs. pour les cartes au 50 000 e .
An example of Exploitation of Aerial Photography on an Industrial
Scale in France
The rapidly increasing development of mining and petroleum prospecting in the African territories
of the French Union has led the prospecting companies for some years to use systematic aerial
photography to establish topographic and geologic maps necessary to their research. Morphologic
and structural maps may be made from aerial photographs, particularly in regions where no
topographic maps exist. These maps help in preparing and orientating future research, and
accelerate and facilitate the work of the field geologists.
The importance of photogeology has led the Institut Français du Pétrole to create a specialized
department able to fill the ever increasing needs of the mining and petroleum industries. This
department does interpretation of aerial photographs on an industrial scale. It was recognized early
that to reach its maximum efficiency, photogeologic studies should be done on a large scale by
specialized teams of photogeologists, photogrammeters and cartographers. A trained geologist may
be able to interpret a few aerial photographs covering a small area by himself, but to interpret a
large region, the collaboration of photogrammeters and cartographers will be needed to compensate
for the distortion and the changes of scale before establishing the final map.
At the present time, the photogeologic department of the Institut Français du Pétrole is divided
in three sections:
1°— the bureau of photogeological interpretation where twelve photogeologists analyse and interpret
aerial photographs.
2°— the bureau of photogrammetry, where four photogrammeters, three assistant photogrammeters
and two photographers do triangulation, adjustment and bring the data to scale.
3°— the bureau of cartography where thirty draftsmen-cartographers are responsible for drawing
and printing the maps.
By virtue of this organization, the department of photogeology of the IFP has been able to
assume the photogeologic interpretation of about 500 000 square kilometers for several petroleum
companies and Bureau of Alines. Alost of the areas studied are in North Africa and the Sahara.
A study was done in French Guinea for the »Direction des Alines de l’A. O. F.», and several small
areas have been surveyed in different regions of France. A coverage of 20 000 square kilometers of
photogeologic maps is done every month. The cost per square kilometer is a function of the map
scale, and of the difficulties of flying and interpretation. It is about 500 Frs for maps with a scale
of 1/50 000.
Dr. John Roscoe of U.S.A., presented a paper by Mr. W. W. Olive of U.S.A.,
on Tonal Lineaments on the Aerial Photograph:
Tonal lineaments are narrow bands of light or dark tone that are visible on
aerial photographs. Many lineaments are seen at a cursory glance; however, others
are relatively inconspicuous and can best be seen by viewing aerial vertical
photographs (individual prints or mosaics) at an angle near parallel with the
surface of the photograph, with the line of sight directed toward a non-reflecting
background and the surface of the photograph illuminated by a source of light
placed behind the observer. The magnitude of tonal lineaments seen on photo
graphs is dependent largely on the scale of the photograph. Local lineaments
can best be seen on large scale (about 1: 20 000) photographs, and sub-regional
to regional lineaments can best be seen on small scale (about 1: 200 000) mosaics
or photographs. Lineaments of even greater extent are visible on high altitude
photographs such as those taken from rockets 100 miles above the earth. Tonal
lineaments visible on Mars (as »canals») and the moon are continuous for
several hundred and even thousands of miles.
Most tonal lineaments probably have a structural origin. In the Gulf Coastal
Plain of the southern United States, tonal lineaments that continue for tens of
miles mark the positions of Recent and Pleistocene faults and fault zones. In
West Texas tonal lineaments have been observed to mark positions of faults,