Full text: Transactions of the Symposium on Photo Interpretation

SYMPOSIUM PHOTO INTERPRETATION, DELFT 1962 
Fig. 4. Strip lynchets, Mere, Wiltshire, from the east. 
(Photograph by J. K. S. St Joseph; British Crown Copyright reserved. Explanatory diagram 
by Eric Moss) 
Finally we come to our fourth operation, presentation. Here two factors 
that have already been stressed introduce particular difficulties. The fact that 
we are studying whole landscapes and that ground remains of different date 
are often intermingled and closely crowded, means, firstly, that we have to 
limit our plans to a reasonable size for publication but, secondly, that at the 
scale thereby imposed we cannot draw all the detail that may be vital. Since 
a readily recognisable view with all its infinity of detail can do more to show 
what a site looks like than any plan, one or more oblique air photographs are 
almost ideal to complement the scale plans which we need to provide us with 
measurable data. 
Such detail as cannot be drawn has to be described, with measurements
	        
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