International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B7. Istanbul 2004
Italy. The interest of this survey is in the fact the disaster has
not yet happened, and the acquired data will be used to design
works for consolidating and preventing a possible landslide.
After a long period of intense rain at the end of 2002, water
infiltrations has begun to corroded the bottom sector of the
slope, calling for interventions of surveying and protection.
The studied slope is about 70 m in length, 45 m in width and 50
m in height.
In order to define a permanent GRS for multi-temporal
acquisitions, 4 monuments have been placed on the other side
of the small valley. Relative positions of these points have been
determined with a sub-cm accuracy either by static GPS
measurement and by a polygonal network by total station.
Thank to the avilability of two GPS permanent station of the
Politecnico di Milano located in the research centres of Como
and Lecco, coordinates of monuments have been also referred
to the national geodetic network IGM95, so that the whole laser
scanning survey can be inserted in existing maps. Thank to the
positioning of these points, we have then placed targets in
positions to assure a good stability for 3D-views registration,
disregarding the fact they could be in sites subject to movement
in the future. In fact, 8 targets have been placed, 5 of these
consisting in a special structure (Figure 2) mounted on a tripod,
made up of a disk covered by a highly reflective material and
by a plug to fix a prism of a GPS antenna; two different
diameters for targets are possible on two side of the rotating
plane (20 and 50 cm). Positions of these targets in the GRS
have been determined by intersection from monuments, so that
they can be considered as GCPs. Furthermore, 3 circular small
reflecting targets (diameter of 8 cm) have been placed in the
central part of the surveyed area to register a detail scan to the
other ones; they are not known in the GRS, playing the role of
TPs.
A Riegl LSM-Z420i laser scanner has been used (more
information can be found at website of Riegl). Three scans have
been acquired, two (scan 1 and 2) giving a general view of both
sides of the whole slope, the third (scan 3) focusing on a detail
of the critical central part where a landslide could start.
All acquired 3D-views have been processed using the RiSCAN
PRO Riegl SW, used also for scanner control. Processing has
involved a pre-editing of each scan, consisting in removing
trees and marginal areas, in resampling to reduce the number of
points, as well as in automatic measurements of reflective
targets. Registration has been carried out by using 5 GCPs for
both scans 1 and 2; then scan 3, where only three GCP could be
view, has been pairwise registered to scan | by introducing also
TPs. A mean sigma nought of 2 cm for each registration
(directly to GRS or pairwise to another scan) has been reached.
After each scanning, some images have been collected by a
Canon EOS 1Ds (11.1 Mpixel) digital camera, fixed on the top
of LSM-Z420i TLS in stable way. Once the camera has been
positioned in a such manner, the RiSCAN PRO SW allows to
register images to 3D-view. By using an approximate
registration, the user can view the position of reflective targets
(or some other features manually extracted) projected into the
images; by simply interactively correcting residuals between
position of targets on the image and their projection from 3D
scan, the registration parameter from image to scan can be
computed. However, the intrinsic calibration of digital camera
must be known. The advantage of using a camera already
registered to the scanner results in the possibility of colouring
the 3D-models or obtaining a photo-texture representation
without any further task; in Figure 3 a colour 3D model of the
whole study site is reported.
Figure 3: frontal view of the landslide in Caslino d'Erba; the
point-cloud have been added up by the colour information.
3.2 Botticino Marble Quarry (Brescia)
A Marble Quarry in the Botticino area (Brescia, Italy) has been
selected to test the TLS technology for geological survey
(Monti et al. ,1999). Main objectives of this test have been:
e defining the technical procedure for the usage of TLS
in quarries;
e testing laser scanning approach for geological
applications.
Field survey campaign is organized in the following main steps:
1 definition of TLS stand-points;
2. target (GCPs) displacement;
3. acquisition of range scans and digital imagery;
4. georeference of targets by GPS.
Two TLS stand-points have been selected outside the quarry so
that both excavation area and GCPs were well visible, and in
the way that extraction activity would not be interrupted. (Fig.
4).
Scans obtained from different viewpoints have been
transformed into a single reference frame (Fig. 4) using highly
retro-reflective targets built for LRTLS applications (Fig. 2). A
GSP antenna mounted over the target has been used for
georeference. The shift between antenna’s phase centre and
retro-reflective target centre has been previously measured.
During laser data acquisition, digital image of the quarry have
been acquired as well.
Figure 4: Range scans obtained from different viewpoints (1,2)
are transformed into a single reference frame.
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