AMBROSE'S
yoldsmith art. It was
survey of the altar, in
ermission would not
analytical restitution
jected onto the object
oint projected on the
ate coordinates were
JD coordinates, XYZ,
symmetrically to the
stitution of the points
n, both coloured and
jas, in time, suffered
unbrose decided, in
or the Artistic and
ful to create a precise
by photogrammetric
tion with time. Fig. 1
a 1996
This work was made possible thanks to the collaboration of
AGIP S.p.A. and of the technicians who provided both the
highly specialised equipment and operational experience.
2. PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENT
The equipment AGIP made available was:
(a)Two large-format, wide-angle, universal UMK 10/1318
Jenoptik-Jena metric camera fitted on an orientation system
with a Horizontal circle and a device to tilt the
photogrammetric axis .
(b) A metric projector developed at AGIP in a study under the
direction of the author (Baj, 1988) mainly obtained matching a
UMK camera 10/ 1318 and a projector without lenses.
(c) A synchroniser, pulse emitter, allowing simultaneous
photography.
3. SURVEYING METHODOLOGY
The photogrammetric survey can be divided into two phases;
the objective of the first phase is to obtain a dense mesh of
control points, which could be determined with great accuracy,
on the sides of the altar. These points, which can be linked to a
topographic survey for their absolute orientation and for scale
problem, are not significant in plotting the altar. The second
phase aimed instead at plotting points inside the mesh in order
to map the altar and its reliefs.
3.1 First Phase
In the first phase, since it was forbidden to place targets onto
the altar, the methodology by us termed one photogram raster-
photogrammetry was employed.
With this method the equivalent of targets on the altar were
obtained by projecting onto it a mesh of known geometry
employing the metric projector:
On the back of the camera-projector, in the principal plane, an
optical glass on which a mesh and a reference system are
etched, was positioned so as to ensure that the reference
system of the mesh and the axes defined by the camera's marks
coincided. (The etched plate with the reference system will be
referred to as pseudo-photogram - fig. 2)
Figure 2 Pseudo-photogram
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B5. Vienna 1996