COMPUTER - ASSISTED NUMERICAL ORIENTATION FOR THE
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REVISION OF THE SWISS NATIONAL MAP 1:25000
by Ch.Eidenbenz and D.Schneider, dipl.Ing ETH
Federal Office of Topography, CH-3084 Wabern, Switzerland
1 Introduction
The Federal Office of Topography of Switzerland is, according to
official order, author and administrator of the Swiss National Maps.
These maps were completed in February 1979 and include 249 sheets at the
scale 1:25'000, 78 sheets at 1:50'000, 23 sheets at 1:100'000, 4 sheets
at 1:200'000 and one sheet at 1:500'000. All of these maps are purely
topographical maps, extremely accurate and with a high information
density.
Since 1968 the maps were being systematically revised, using strictly
new aerial photography and stereo-compilation to collect the new infor
mation.
Today, after the completion of the map series, revision is our main
task.
2 The revision procedure
In 1968 the Office decided to start a regular revision program for all
maps, based on a cycle of 6 years. This program runs quite successfully.
Actually we are now in the middle of the third revision cycle. The steps
of the program are the following:
Every year we acquire aerial photographs of one sixth of the country at
an approximate image scale of 1:25'000.
In the first step, the new photographs and the six-year old maps are
compared in the office using stereo-interpretation and any differences
are registered in a sketch-map. In the second step, this sketch-map is
then completed with a field check, a task which we consider to be very
important. In the third step, all new elements indicated in the sketch-
map are photogrammetrically compiled. We use three WILD A8 and one WILD
A7 stereo-plotters for this task. The plotting base consists of a
coated glass plate containing a copy of the old map. For the smaller
scales (1:50'000 and smaller) we reduce this information and select the
scale-relevant features.
Because of meteorological and administrative reasons, signalization of
control-points in our country would be too expensive and time-consuming.
Therefore, we use exclusively map elements (crossroads, houses, spot
heights etc.) for ground control. Experience has shown that we can
maintain our accuracy standards of ±0.1-0.3 mm in planimetry and ±1-2 m
in height.