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WHERE FREQUENT REFERENCE MUST BE MADE TO LANDMARKS, TO
LIGHTS AND BUOYS, AND TO FEATURES OF THE NEARBY LAND.
We hold that a nautical chart is an instrument of navi-
gation that must be kept up to date to serve its intended
purpose, l.e., to insure the safety of navigation. The
larger part of our charting effort is devoted to maintenance,
particularly the maintenance of the considerable number of
large scale charts. For example, in 1959 we published only
20 new and reconstructed charts but we revised and reprinted
= charts, or nearly 65% of the total number of charts on
ssue.
It is against this background of large scale charts
with their requirement for frequent revision that our pho-
togrammetric procedures have been developed over the last
30-odd years. We use nine-lens and single-lens photography
together with limited ground surveys and stereoscopic plot-
ting instruments:
1l. TO PERFORM AEROTRIANGULATION, to position land-
marks and aids to navigation, to provide alongshore
control points for inshore hydrography, and to po-
sition individual models for map compilation.
2. TO PREPARE DETAILED LARGE SCALE MAPS showing
the shoreline, alongshore rocks and structures,
indications of shoals and channels visible in the
photographs, and the land features adjacent to the
shore. These are prepared ahead of hydrography
for the guidance of the hydrographer and are used
together with the hydrographic survey for the con-
Struction or revision of the chart.
3. TO CORRECT THE AIDS, LANDMARKS AND LAND FEATURES
ON CHART DRAWINGS directly from new aerial photog-
raphy to bring this information up to date just prior
to reprinting and reissue of the chart.
We took our first experimental color photography just
two years ago in reference to an unusual shoreline mapping
problem--we were amazed and delighted with its ability to
RECORD, AND TO SEPARATE DETAILS NOT SEEN ON PANCHROMATIC
FILM. The amount of field work required in our photogram-
metric mapping is generally in inverse ratio to the clarity
with which certain features such as landmarks, lights and
beacons, rocks awash, and inlylng shoals and channels can
be seen and identified with certainty on aerial photographs.