International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B5. Istanbul 2004
Byzantine Lycia, a Japanese joint research project whose
members include art historians, archaeologists, architectural
historians, a photographer, and students. They started
excavating Church III, one of the four basilicas on the island, in
1995 after several years dedicated to surface exploration. Over
10 years of research has revealed that the city was built in the
late 5th to early 6th centuries, i.e., during the early Byzantine
era, and the close relationship between the island and St.
Nicholas (Tsuji, 1995; Research Group for Byzantine Lycia,
1998; 2002).
Of the four basilicas on the island, the so-called Church II and
Church III have kept their original form relatively well and
hence they were selected as the first targets for 3D recording
and modelling in the Gemiler Island project (Kadobayashi et al.
2003). Church II, which stands halfway up the western slope of
the island, has three aisles and measures about 20 x 10 x 9 m.
The semi-dome of the apse and the north wall are well
preserved (Figure 1). Some frescos remain on the walls around
the entrance and the windows. A floor mosaic was also found
there.
Figure 1. Church II: exterior view (left) and interior view
(right)
Church III, located just below the top of the island, and hence
easily visible to ships sailing on the Mediterranean, has three
aisles and measures approximately 30 x 15 x 9 m. Generally,
the south and west of the basilica, i.e. the atrium and west and
south wall, are well preserved, whereas the north and east, i.e.,
the semi-dome of the apse and the east wall, are not. The
wooden roofs of both basilicas have completely perished
(Figure 2).
Figure 2. Church III: west wall and nave (left) and apse and
nave (right)
3. DATA COLLECTION
In 2002, we conducted 3D measurement of the two basilicas. In
addition to the laser scanning, which was the main task,
surveying using a total station and RTK-GPS, and taking
photographs with digital cameras were carried out
(Kadobayashi et al. 2003). In total, we spent 11 days at the site.
3.1 Laser Scanning
We selected a Riegl LPM-25HA to scan the two basilicas due to
its battery-driven capability, portability, and accuracy in
meeting our requirements. Although the basilicas are relatively
large, the architectural historian required a sampling step of 1
cm or less, assuming that the plans would have been drawn to a
scale of 1:100. Table 1 summarizes the specification of the laser
scanner.
SPECIFICATION VALUE
Measurement range 2 — 60m
Measurement accuracy + 8 mm
Measurement rate 1000 points/sec.
Measurement resolution 1 mm
Measuring beam diameter | 15 mm @ 10 m
20 mm @ 20 m
60 mm @ 60 m
Laser wavelength near infrared
Horizontal scanning range | + 180°
Vertical scanning range =150°
Positioning accuracy = 0.009"
Angle readout accuracy + 0.009°
Scanning speed 36°/sec.
Scanner size 25 x 30 x 42 em
Scanner weight 9.5 kg
Table 1. LPM25HA laser scanner specifications
We located the scanner at 29 points and scanned 55 images of
Church III. The number of measured points was approximately
34 million and the total data amounted to about 470 MB
including the RGB value of each point. At Church II, we
located the scanner at five locations and scanned seven images,
totaling about 5 million points and amounting to 70 MB. It took
about 55 hours to scan Church III and 7 hours to scan Church II.
The sampling step was altered from 0.06 te 0.15 gon according
to the importance and condition of the target, though due to
limited work time, most targets were scanned with a sampling
step of 0.1 gon. When the sampling step was 0.06 gon and the
target was 10 m away, the sampling step on the target was
about 1 cm, while it was about 1.6 cm when the sampling step
was 0.1 gon.
3.2 Photo Shoot
The Riegl LPM-25HA is capable of capturing RGB color, but it
was considered unlikely that the quality would be good enough
for our applications. In addition, it was not able to scan the
details of the mosaic flooring and hence we needed another
method to record these.
A DCS Pro Back from Kodak with a Distagon 50-mm F4 FLE
lens, mounted on.a Hasselblad 555ELD, was used to record
high-resolution images that were intended to be used to provide
texture data for the 3D models. It has a CCD that is 36.86 x
36.86 mm and produces 4072 x 4072 pixel images. Around
1300 images were taken at Church II and Church III.
We took these photos in such a way that adjacent pictures
would overlap. As far as possible, we also tried to take them
from an orthogonal position in relation to targets such as walls,
though this was sometimes impossible when photographing
floors since scaffolding was required. In these cases,
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