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rigorous, this "screw" may be turned to the bottom which means that
the problem is unsolvable. Additional vertical controls must than be
planned between the original ones; that is to break down the strip in
shorter parts. The terrain must be crossed with a levelling-line or simi-
lar and than, of course, many extra z-points could be determined with
out extra costs, so that you get vertical controls in almost every pl
model.
[f the elevation accuracy specifications are not so rigorous, but still
not of the type "reconnaissance map" and if the contour line interval is
of the magnitude >—10 meters the modern highresolving lenses place
you in a dilemma. You can get sufficant elevation accuracy in separa-
tely horizontalised plotting models even if the photographs are taken
from the maximum height of the airplane (e. g. 6—9 000 meters) and
you get a tremendous area in each plotting model (netto 30—65 sqkm),
If you, on the other hand plan to use real z-bridgings — and I do not
call a "bridging" over one or two models a real z-bridging — the prob-
able heighterrors in the triangulation may be an absolute obstacle for
using the very economic high-altitude photography.
Still without speaking about "reconnaissance mapping we must ob-
serve
1:0 that a net of terrestrial elevation fixes is needed for many activi-
ties soon after or even before the mapping is concluded and
2:0 that levelling of a sparse network of elevationtixes normally is
not a very complicated or expensive task compared with the determina-
tion of a geodetic terrestrial network sufficiant for scaling and orienta-
tion of each plotting model. Of course there are also areas inaccessible
for levelling e. g. in high-mountains, the tropics or the artics but than
the accuracy specifications are not so rigorous and permit high altitude
photography and photogrammetric bridging which could be substituted
with radar profiling, barometric levelling or similar measurements.
As a consequence of the foregoing it might be emphasized that —
excluding for small scale mapping and reconnaisance mapping — photo-
grammetric bridging for determination of z-controls in many cases
could be and as a matter of fact are substituted with terrestrial levelling
needed also for other purposes. If the maps shall be used for planning
of irrigation, reservoirs or water power projects a terrestrial levelling
of vertical passpoints 1s especially advisable.
When discussing photogrammetric control point densening there is
another problem of common interest — how the horizontal accuracy is
to be defined. The classical definition, an inheritance from the geodesy,
is the mean square coordinate-error in relation to geodetic points 0!
higher order. So far as geodetic terrestrial surveys are concerned, this
is quite natural and the only possible way for practical purposes. In
photogrammetric triangulation and mapping and especially in block-
otting