(676)
in a ground photo, can often be localized exactly through comparison with à
topical aerial photograph.
After the return of the patrol, the films are developed and examined
through magnifying-glasses by personnel who have good knowledge of the
enemy's organization and equipment. While this is being done, the patrol leader
and the photographer
should be present. The
targets can usually be
ascertained from the
negative, and only in
exceptional cases is it
necessary to make
prints.
It is not generally
necessary to take meas-
urements in order to
identify the target,
although it may some-
times be to advantage
to be able to measure
de the dimensions of a
Fig. 7. The fast reconnaissance photographer must be able to target. It is possible to
work quickly and surely. Amateur cameras are easy to handle do this if one knows
and are therefore used for this purpose. the focal length of the
camera and the dis-
tance at which the photo was taken, which, in its turn, may be determined
through comparing the terrain objects of the ground photo with an aerial photo
or map.
Manuals containing drawings and photos of the enemy vehicle and gun
types facilitate identification. Reconnaissance photos of such objects should be
used to keep these manuals always up to date.
Detailed Reconnaissance.
Purposes.
The purpose of detailed reconnaissance, is to photographically reconnoitre
targets which cannot be discerned through ordinary reconnaissance without
photograhs. It is quite natural that this form of intelligence must be carried out
with greater photographic precision than in the case of fast reconnaissance, and
the personnel employed must have been specially photographically trained and
provided with good technical equipment.
Equipment.
The camera equipment must be first-class. The optics must be exchangeable,
the lenses must be normal ones of about 6 in. (15 cm) and must be teleoptic with
a focal length of up to about 1 metre. As an optical viewer, a frame sight or
perhaps a telescope is desirable (see fig. 8). The lenses must be first-class ones,
well color-corrected and constructed for quick changes between panchromatic
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