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photogrammetric plotters are producing digital maps instead of pencil
manuscripts; graphical maps are then produced by line plotters under
computer control. Editing by interactive computer graphics is being
developed. Some agencies are experimenting with interpretation of
satellite imagery for land use determination and with airborne sensors
for soil and geologic data. Increased use of photointerpretation has
increased the demand for color photographs. Many cartographers are
finding color photography superior for mapping, especially in arid
regions and for pavement surfaces.
The field which has shown the highest rate of growth is photo-
logging. Typically, a 35 millimeter camera, mounted in a van, takes a
photograph through the windshield every 52.8 feet, that is, 100 photo-
graphs every mile. The resulting photography may be studied by highway
specialists to extract many types of information. Individual photographs
may be projected, or a series may be viewed in rapid succession, to
inventory signing and traffic control devices, surface and roadside con-
ditions, lane markings, entrances, encroachments, and many other items.
They are useful to study high accident sites or sites of individual
accidents. Some organizations are obtaining dimensions from the photo-
graphs by applying photogrammetric principles to single photographs or
to successive pairs of photographs. Today, 40 or more States and some
cities, counties, and Federal agencies are engaged in photologging
of primary and secondary highways.
TOPOGRAPHIC DIVISION, U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
Ed Swasey
Major photogrammetric activities of the U.S. Geological Survey
include the following items.
1. In 1973 almost all Washington, D.C. operations were consoli-
dated in the new USGS National Center at Reston, Virginia. A National
Cartographic Information Center (NCIC) was established to assemble and
disseminate comprehensive information on maps, charts, aerial and space
imagery covering the United States. The EROS Data Center was established
at Sioux Falls, South Dakota as a national repository for processing and
distributing aerial and space imagery.
2. The "Standard Specifications for Aerial Photography for
Photogrammetric Mapping" were revised and republished in May 1974. The
new specifications differentiate between aerial photography for standard
compilation, for fully analytical aerotriangulation, and for orthophotography.
Annual photocoverage has increased from 415,000 km? in FY 1972
to 1,215,000 km? in FY 1975. The proportion of high altitude photography
-53-