LOW-HEIGHT AERIAL IMAGERY AND DIGITAL PHOTOGRAMMETRICAL
PROCESSING FOR ARCHAEOLOGICAL MAPPING
G. Bitelli *, V. A. Girelli, M. A. Tini, L. Vittuari
DISTART, University of Bologna, Viale Risorgimento 2, 40136 Bologna, Italy
(gabriele.bitelli, valentina.girelli, mariaalessandra.tini, luca.vittuari)@mail.ing.unibo.it
KEYWORDS: Photogrammetry, Archaeology, Cultural Heritage, DSM/DTM, Orthoimage, Matching, Aerial photogrammetry
ABSTRACT:
In the framework of the Joint Archaeological Mission of the Universities of Bologna and Lecce at the ancient town of Soknopaiou
Nesos (Fayyum, Egypt) a wide-range of geomatic methodologies were experimented (GPS, total station surveys, low-height aerial
and close-range photogrammetry, Visual Reality, high resolution satellite imagery, etc.). The surveys were conducted with the aim of
recording metrical and non-metrical information inside a common reference system for the development of a GIS for the
archaeological area.
The paper deals in particular with the acquisition and processing of low-height aerial imagery to provide very large-scale mapping of
the area in support of archaeological researches. A remote controlled system, ad hoc developed for cultural heritage applications,
permits to operate both semi-metric and non-metric cameras, lifted by balloon or kites with specific arrangements, in order to
systematically take pictures over the study area.
The images acquired during the 2002 campaign by a non-metrical camera, calibrated by field calibration procedure, were processed
within a Socet Set digital photogrammetric workstation: acro-triangulation, digital orthoimage generation and mosaicing were
realized. The external orientation was established through kinematic GPS-derived ground control points, surveyed within the
International Terrestrial Reference Frame ITRF2000; the same kinematic survey provided also a DTM for the entire site.
After a description of the overall approach to the survey of the site by the integration of different techniques, the paper describes the
results obtained by this photogrammetric campaign, pointing out specifically the aspects concerning the non-standard image
arrangement within the photogrammetric block, the problems arised by the geometrical structure of the buildings (e.g. the presence of
very high mud-bricks walls in the temenos), and the use and comparison of DTMs derived from image-matching techniques or from
GPS surveys.
I. INTRODUCTION
The ancient town of Soknopaiou Nesos (Figure 1), dating back
to the Greco-Roman period, is located in Fayyum, Egypt,
northward of Birket Qarun Lake; it rises on a kom with a
characteristic oval shape, with ruins and buildings in mud-
bricks. Unfortunately the increasing popularity of desert tourism
is seriously risking the good preservation of the site.
From an archaeological point of view the site is not well known
and little has been published about it; in the past there have been
many excavations (Grenfell and Hunt in 1900-1901, Zucker in
1909-1910, Ahmed Bey Kamal in 1916), but the only scientific
research of the area happened in 1932 by the Archaeological
Mission of the Michigan University, directed by E.E. Peterson.
Figure 1. A view of Soknopaiou Nesos (from North).
The Italian Joint Archaeological Mission of the Universities of
Bologna and Lecce, directed by S. Pernigotti and M. Capasso,
started working at the town in 2001, to begin a project of
documentation and study of the archaeological remains (Davoli,
2004). The first map of the site was the one produced by K.R.
Lepsius in 1843 and reproduced in figure 2 (from Davoli,
1998); in the city are clearly visible the large temenos, enclosing
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the Temple area, in the North and the long dromos in the North-
South direction.
During the topographic campaign carried out in February 2002,
a wide-range of different geomatic techniques were applied:
GPS, total station survey, photographic visual reality, aerial and
close-range photogrammetry. Moreover, VHR (Very High
Resolution) satellite imagery of the area was subsequently
acquired. All the metrical and non metrical information is
recorded in a common reference system for the creation of a
GIS for the archaeological site and the surrounding area. A
similar approach was followed for the site of Bakchias in the
same region of Fayyum (Bitelli et al., 2003b).
The paper describes in particular the acquisition and digital
processing of low-height aerial imagery to produce very large-
scale mapping of the area.
A large number of non metrical images were acquired from an
ad-hoc realized autonomous system based on balloon, to face
the difficulties in realizing a traditional aerial photogrammetric
survey in this region. The data were used to produce an
orthophotomosaic of the site, the first digital metric map of this
kind for Soknopaiou Nesos; it provides a high-quality detailed
photographic and metric description of the numerous, often
semi-buried, structures and their relationships.
The work and the obtained results are presented, pointing out
the problems concerning the collection of DTM, caused by the
non conventional geometry of the photogrammetric block and
by the presence of high-rise walls; besides the DSMs derived
from various image-matching strategies were compared with the
DTMs obtained by the GPS kinematic survey.
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