Full text: Transactions of the Symposium on Photo Interpretation

146 
SYMPOSIUM PHOTO INTERPRETATION, DELFT 1962 
and Africa emphasise that land patterns are not confined to such terrain. 
A typical temperate maritime scarpland pattern of which the three facets 
illustrated in fig. 1 are part is shown in fig. 2. A desert scarpland (fig. 3) 
appears at first sight to be similar, but the constituent facets in the two cases 
are not comparable. They differ both in the nature of their soil cover and in 
their internal variation, the third criterion used in defining the facets. 
Fig. 2. Scarpland pattern in a temperate maritime climate as developed in the English 
Cotswolds 
An Index of Patterns 
Patterns of this nature, that is assemblages of inter-related facets could thus 
be the basis for indexing annotated air photographs. The photographs would 
be accompanied by a description and diagram showing how the pattern is 
composed of its constituent facets. But although each pattern covers an appre 
ciable area and any country can be subdivided into a limited number of them 
there are probably still a large number in the world as a whole. If one wishes
	        
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