4
about 30 feet. In addition to this main net, a second-order
accuracy triangulation net had been extended from Bay of Islands
across the railroad belt to the city of St. John's on the east coast,
and some precise levels had been established along the main rail-
road.
The task that confronted the Federal Government mapping
agencies was indeed formidable - virtually the mapping of the
whole Island of Newfoundland. Tiam ing the air photography and
planning and carrying out field surve oys and map compilation were
the responsibility of the Topographical Survey of the Department
of Mines and Technical Surveys assisted by the Army Survey
Establishment of the Department of National Defence. Arrange-
ments were made through the Interdepartmental Committee on
Air Surveys for the progressive completion of air photography to
specifications prepared by the National Research Council.
Cameras equipped with six-inch wide-angle cones were used for
all photography and the most common scale specified was
1:40, 000.
At this time, the Topographical Survey was making radical
changes in its field and office techniques. The urgency of the
mapping project, together with the fact that the large island area
seemed well suited to the employment of high-production methods,
gave additional impetus to the changes. In the field, considerable
use was to be made of helicopters for transporting surveyors,
and in the office 1 he multiplex method of extending control and
plotting detail was displacing the time-worn method of reading
parallax and sketching contours on photo prints.
Field operations were commenced in 1949 on the Avalon
Peninsula and along the east coast where 1:40, 000 photography
was available and Geodetic Survey control was readily accessible.
Since most of the hill tops were bare, horizont al control was
generally extended by triangulation and vertical control by verti-
cal angulation supplemented by stadia and barometric levelling.
As the work moved away from geodetic control, additional tri-
angulation nets were established although to lower standards of
accuracy than the geodetic nets. From 1949 to 1954, ground
survey parties continued work along the east and south coast,
some of the engineers in charge of these parties having had pre-
vious service on similar work for the Newfoundland Government,