Full text: Proceedings, XXth congress (Part 2)

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International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B2. Istanbul 2004 
  
should only be used as a secondary measure, to supplement the 
information collected by other means. 
Map scale 
C14 
EEE 
= = = 
S = = 
7 : e = = eS 
Features = = n 
um C3 e 
:2500 
All vegetation 
  
  
M 
; Major landscape changes pans ; 
[mand ae 
Airports | y n n 
Railways n n 
; Non-residential buildings EPIS n n 
Extensions to commercial buildings EE m © 
Water features Ea ^m 2 m 7 
| Quarries ios m m 
Housing & associated features n n 
| Field EU : m - m 
| Minor property boundaries m , m 
n n 
  
Major property boundaries 
  
Telephone boxes In n n n n 
Electricity transmission lines n: n n n n 
Tide lines T nonem n n 
Table 3: Analysis of the types of features which can be 
identified from QuickBird imagery, at various 
national mapping scales. Key: y = yes - feature can 
be captured; n = no - feature cannot be successfully 
captured; m = maybe - in some circumstances the 
features can be captured, in others, not. 
3. CHANGE DETECTION AND MONITORING 
3.1 Change Intelligence 
Although the main duty of a mapping agency is to update 
geospatial data, such data cannot be updated unless it is known 
where topographic change has taken place. Therefore, change 
intelligence forms a very important part of the map revision 
process. There are many different ways to identify change, one 
of the most important being local observation by surveyors in 
the field. Local planning authorities may provide planning 
information, as do commercial change detection agencies. In 
Great Britain, new housing development plans are often 
supplied to mapping agencies by architects and house building 
consortia. 
To supplement this direct observation and notification of 
change, there is a role for imagery. High resolution satellite 
sensor imagery may allow surveyors to find areas of change 
which would not be detected using the other methods. For 
example, in areas undergoing continual change, such as central 
London, satellite imagery could provide regular snapshots of 
the area, enabling surveyors to constantly monitor and capture 
topographic change. 
In rural areas, the change intelligence requirements are often 
different. Buildings may be constructed without planning 
permission; field boundaries are changed from year to year; 
hedges and woodlands may be removed, or newly planted. 
These will often be in remote areas; and therefore do not come 
to the attention of local surveyors or any of the change 
notification bodies. In these areas, it is suggested that imagery 
can prove a valuable tool for change e Ye ecially if 
this use can be combined with a role as a source of data for the 
subsequent capture of the topographic change. 
To test this hypothesis, extracts of QuickBird images in the 
Salisbury and Manchester areas were examined to detect 
changes. These results were then compared with change 
intelligence obtained by conventional means. 
3.1.1 Change Intelligence Results 
Previously unrecorded changes were detected in both the rural 
and urban images. In the urban area of Manchester, most of the 
changes were classed as “category À” (this category includes 
new housing, commercial, industrial, community and public 
sector buildings, roads, rail and other communications links). 
In the rural area, most of the changes were “category B” (this 
category includes small agricultural and horticultural buildings, 
quarries and other surface workings, field boundaries, water 
features, vegetation features, tracks and paths). In Manchester 
the analysis uncovered an average density of one site of signifi- 
cant change per square km; the corresponding figure for Salis- 
bury was 0.66 sites per square km. Note that these were 
changes which had not been identified using traditional change 
intelligence techniques. 
The main types of change identified in the Manchester study 
site were: building demolitions (industrial and housing); newly 
built industrial units; railway demolitions and minor road al- 
terations. It was not possible to detect changes such as new 
traffic calming measures; small property boundary changes; or 
mobile-home movements. Of course there are other changes 
which are impossible to detect using any type of imagery, in- 
cluding name changes, conversions of buildings from agricul- 
tural to residential, or address changes. 
In the Salisbury area, the main types of change were to typi- 
cally rural features such as fences, tracks and vegetation 
boundaries. Although recorded as *Category B" and therefore 
regarded as slightly less important to the large scales data col- 
lector, these features are of significant interest to the leisure 
map user and are therefore important to the small scales map 
update process. As in the large-scale case, there are many 
changes which cannot be observed from imagery alone, includ- 
ing non-topographic data such as tourist information. 
These results indicate that QuickBird imagery can be used to 
identify topographic changes for both large- and small-scale 
mapping. The cost of the imagery may well be the sticking 
point. At current costs, it would not be economically viable to 
use QuickBird data (or any other high resolution satellite sensor 
imagery) solely for the purpose of change intelligence. 1f, how- 
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