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The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. Vol. XXXVII. Part B5. Beijing 2008
Figure 10. 3D comparison between laser scanner and image matching of the central area of the marble in Figure 8. The area has been
modeled with the ETH matcher using three convergent images and then compared in IMInspect with the range data acquired with a
Surphaser 25HSX laser scanner. The colour-coded differences of (a) Canon and (b) Mamiya show an apparent laser penetration of ca.
3 mm in both cases. The colour legend on the right shows differences between + 5.5mm and - 5.5mm for Canon and +8mm and -
8mm for the Mamiya. The Mamiya results are more noisy mainly due to the GSD of 0.6mm, while for Canon the GSD was 0.3mm.
The black line shows identical regions.
5. CONCLUSIONS
In this contribution, we presented the image-based 3D modeling
of the Erechtheion monument. Data acquisition, processing,
problems encountered and the results of the digital
reconstruction have been discussed. Due to the complexity of
the monument, the relatively large baselines of the images and
the significant occlusions, primary manual measurements were
applied to reconstruct the 3D geometry. For some detailed areas,
automated procedures able to recover dense point clouds were
instead applied.
Advanced matching algorithms results have been reported, with
an accuracy potential similar to that of laser scanning.
Furthermore, we have shown that marble is a very challenging
material due to either lack of texture and strongly anisotropic
reflectance properties. For these reasons, the use of cameras
with good radiometric quality and low noise, as well as good
pre-processing are imperative.
Furthermore, comparison of IBM and laser scanning and the
apparent penetration of laser pulses into the marble surface
were investigated. The resulted effect of signal penetration
seams quite strong (3 mm on the average). This effect needs
deeper investigations and more tests with different laser ranging
technologies and light/pattem projection ranging systems must
be done in this context.
The lesson of the work reveals once more that a single
technique is still not enough for the complete and detailed
modeling of large heritage monuments and sites. The
combination of different techniques is still the best choice for
these kinds of projects, exploiting the inherent strength of each
approach and each one where it is best suited.
Future work will include the detailed IBM of the Maidens
porch and of top parts of Erechteion using the balloon images.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work is part of the project “Development of Geographic
Information Systems at the Acropolis of Athens“, financed by
the European Union and the Government of Greece, and
supervised by the Acropolis Restoration Service, Hellenic
Ministry of Culture. The partners in this project are Elliniki
Photogrammetriki Ltd (Elpho), Athens, Geotech O.E., Athens,
ETH (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology), Zurich, National
Research Council, Canada, Institute for Mediterranean Studies,
Foundation for Research & Technology (FORTH), Rethymnon,
Crete, with external cooperators, Leica Geosystems,
Switzerland and Basis Software Inc., USA.
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