FINLAND 7
The Board of Forestry is carrying out quite extensive forest mappings in the
large state forests in North-Finland. The mapping method is about the same as
explained in the Report of 1956. Essential to this method is that the sparse geodetic
control net is extended by using radial-plotting. Photographs which have been
rectified by using the horizon angles are used in this radial-plotting, which is carried
out with spider templets. Some experiments have also been made with the Zeiss
Radialsecator I.
The stereoscopic photograph interpretation has been found out to be correct
in 80—90 cases of hundred, in spite of the small scale of the photographs, in the
distinct forest areas of North-Finland. The forests in South-Finland are much more
difficult to interpret, therefore the use of aerial photographs is limited there to some
few single objects.
The inventorying work is counted to have been speeded up about 20—40 %
in South-Finland and 50 % in North-Finland compared with the earlier field
methods.
Lake regulation and water power planning
The state-owned power companies set up in 1955 a mutual photogrammetric
service which carries out mapping with autographs in scales 1 : 500—1 : 10 000.
The waterfalls which have not yet been built up are situated in North-Finland,
and so the works of the service are also concentrated therein. The coarse network
of highways and the sparse geodetic control in this area set their own obstacles to
the work of the service. Helicopters are much used to speed up the geodetic surveys.
Tellurometer has been used for measuring distances and experiments have been
made also with a Geodimeter.
The aerial photography is carried out with Aviogon and Pleogon cameras.
Aerial triangulation has been carried out with autograph A7 in scales 1 : 10 000
— 1: 30 000 on an area of about 18 500 km? during the years 1956—1959. Merely
in 1959 about 7000 km? were triangulated.
An area of about 13 200 km? has been mapped with A7 and A8 instruments
during the same period. The most part of this has been made in scale 1 : 10 000 with
2.5 and 5 metres contour interval, and the rest in scales 1 : 500—1 : 4000 with
0.5—2 metres contour interval.
The shore investigations of natural lakes are carried out by using also the single
photograph measuring. The photographs are taken in scale 1:30 000 and the
control extension is made with aerial triangulation. The photographs are rectified
and enlarged with the aid of the instrument values, after which the 0.25 m contours
are surveyed in the flat shore areas on these enlargements by using the field survey
methods.
Other uses of aerial photographs
In the classification of land for taxation on rural areas, rectified enlargements in
1 : 4000 of aerial photographs are still used as a base map. This work is carried out
in the same way as described in the Report of 1956. However, this work is now
diminishing because most of the communities are already mapped for this purpose.
During the years 1956—1959 photographs were prepared for this purpose covering
an area of about 47 000 km?. Until this the classification has been carried out in
410 communities, covering a total area of about 253 000 km?, which is about 83 %
of the whole country.
Checkings of these classification surveys have been made in the Photogrammetric
Division of the General Survey Office both with autograph and with radial-plotting
method,’ covering an area of about 100 km? annually.