ions
the
nn
nt
13
HYDROGRAPHIC DEPARTMENT, Ministry of Defence (Navy)
Aerial survey is used in tidal stream and filtration studies, the plotting of tidal
stream vectors being done with Wild A8 and EK22 equipment and automatic
plotters (35).
INSTITUTE OF HYDROLOGY
In collaboration with The City University, work is in progress in the deter-
mination of snow depth which, combined with density measurements and melt
rates, will permit the estimation of water input to the catchments of the Rivers
Severn and Wye and the modelling of melt water runoff processes (16,17).
Zeiss (Jena) UMK 10/1318 and Wild P32 cameras and a Zeiss (Jena) Stecometer
will be used to provide ground and snow surface co-ordinates in digital and
graphical form. Field experience to date has been limited by a series of mild
winters,
UNIVERSITY OF LONDON:
IMPERIAL COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, Department of
Civil Engineering
The displacements of points on a box girder under stress were determined
from photographs taken with a survey camera mounted in a cradle which was
suspended from a crane. As part of the same research programme, a 1:12
scale model of a composite box girder bifurcated elevated motorway is being
studied at both working and ultimate loads; again photogrammetry is one of
the methods being used to monitor the behaviour of the steel plates. The work
in both cases has been done in collaboration with University College London.
The movements of points on an experimental embankment subjected to prolonged
stress until collapse were evaluated from photographs. The collapse occurred
at night when the points were marked by small lamps. From pairs of X-ray
shadowgraphs of a model containing analogues of soil particles, the positions
of tungsten marks on the particle surfaces were established. This enabled the
rotation and translation in space of the particles under different conditions of
stress to be deduced. Both of these projects were done in collaboration with
City University.
Procedures are being examined for establishing from pairs of convergent
photographs the shapes of grains with maximum dimension of about 1 mm used
for filter beds.
UNIVERSITY OF LONDON:
IMPERIAL COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, Department of Mining
and Mineral Technology, Royal School of Mines
A co-operative study with the Department of Photogrammetry and Surveying,
University College London applied conventional photogrammetric techniques
and terrestrial photography to various rock mechanics problems (130, 131).
Measurements made of joint structures assisted in the design of large open
pits. Observations of small rock movements over periods of time enabled the
strength of rock faces, and hence the slope stability, to be predicted more
accurately.