3.6. Land Consolodation Maps
For the needs of the land consolidation which began in
1911 but was carried out on a mass footing in Bulgaria
during the period 1932-1942, land consolidation maps at
scale of 1:2000 are compilated for some lands with total
area of about 1.5 thousand sq. km.
4. PHOTOGRAMMETRY
4.1. The Beginning
Bulgaria was probably the first country on the Balkan
Peninsula to begin to apply photogrammetry. Terrestrial
photogrammetric photographs were taken during 1907-
1908 and were plotted in the Vienna Cartographic
Institute by Eduard von Orel by means of a
Stereoautograph designed by him. During the Balkan
War (1912) and the World War | (1914-1918) aerial and
terrestrial photographs were taken for military
reconnaissance and road construction.
More considerable attempt to apply terrestrial
photogrammetry for the purpose of compilation a
topographic map at scale of 1:25 000 was done in 1928.
For the same purpose in 1930 began the implementation
of single-image aerial photogrammetry and in 1940 of
aerial stereophotogrammetry. For large-scale mapping
single-image photogrammetry was applied after the end
of World War ll and stereophotogrammetry - since 1954.
4.2. Current Practice
The aerial photogrammetry for civil production purposes
in Bulgaria is concentrated in the following state
enterprises:
Geoplanproject Co., Sofia,
Geodesia Co., Plovdiv,
National Center of Cadastre Ltd., Sofia,
Research in Geodesy and Photogrammetry Ltd.,
Sofia,
Patproject Ltd. Sofia,
Transproject Ltd. Sofia.
Geoplanproject and Geodesia implement analogue
stereoplotting of aerophotographs for compilation and
revision rural and urban topographic maps at scales of 10
000 up to 1:500. The National Center of Cadastre makes
orthophotomaps at scales of 1:10 000 up to 1:2000.
Research in Geodesy and Photogrammetry Ltd.
accomplishes mainly specific photogrammetric works.
Patproject and Transproject make maps at scales of
1:2000, 1:1000 and larger, as well as digital models for
the purposes of design and reconstruction of motor-ways
for the purposes of design and reconstruction of motor-
ways, railways and structures as well as for inventory of
the road and railway network.
4.3. The Place of Photogrammetry
The place of photogrammetry in the land reform and
cadastre in Bulgaria is determined mainly by six of its
82
multiple potentials:
(i) Use of retrospective aerial photographs taken over the
territory of Bulgaria for compilation of the topographic
map at 1:25 000 scale before pooling of private farms
into large collective farms. These aerial photographs
are taken by normal-angle aerial survey camera (focal
length 21 cm, format 18x18 cm) and are at
approximate scale of 1:20 000. In the prevailing cases
real boundaries of ownership at that time in mountain
and hilly regions can be distinguished on them, i.e.
where presumably these boundaries have been
preserved up to now.
(ii) Production of large scale orthophotomaps without
contours as basis of the rural cadastre. The
orthophotomap is cheaper and is produced
considerably faster than the conventional topographic
map which make it more up-to-date. The semantic
information contained on it is of the same quality and
quantity as that on the aerial photographs from which
it is made.
(il) Production and revision of very large-scale
topographic maps in graphical and digital forms as
basis of urban cadastre. This is a slower and more
expensive process but it is inevitable in view of its
high precision necessary for the compilation and
updating of the respective graphical and digital maps.
(iv) Production of photomosaics and other intermediate
photogrammetric products for the purposes of the
land reform. The photogrammetry has the advantage
that from the instant of taking the aerial photography
up to the production of the final product for which it is
intended, several intermediate products can be made
with different accuracy, serving some intermediate
phases of the land reform.
(v) Determination of terrain points by aerial triangulation
for the needs of land reform and cadastre.
Photogrammetry disposes of powerful means for high
precision determination of points on the terrain.
(vi) Numerical mapping of aerial photographs for
compilation of land maps at scale of 1:5000 and
larger, necessary for the restitution of ownership of
agricultural lands in the existing real boundaries
mainly in mountain and hilly regions of the country.
Here one should add also the topographic map at scale
of 1:5000 which is produced and periodically updated by
aerial photogrammetry.
4.4. Basis of Rural Cadastre
The orthophotomaps without contours at scales of
1:5000 and 1:10 000 serve as basis for the rural
cadastre. For this purpose aerial photographs are taken
by a wide-angle aerial camera (focal length 15 cm and
format 23x23 cm) from altitude 2.4 or 4.5 km above the
terrain where aerial photographs are obtained at
approximate scale of 1:16 000 or 1:30 000 respectively.
The orthophotoscopy is accomplished by the systems
Zeiss Topocart-Orthophot and Topomat. The necessary
control points for absolute orientation of stereomodels
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B6. Vienna 1996
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