Full text: New perspectives to save cultural heritage

CIPA 2003 XIX th International Symposium, 30 September-04 October, 2003, Antalya, Turkey 
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Figure 7. A 3D view of the TIN, density l-2cm 
The next stage included orientation of all stereopairs and DTM 
extraction at the SSK Z/I Imaging digital photogrammetric 
workstation. Several attempts were made for performing 
triangulation adjustment, absolute or relative, of all the 
stereopairs at each part (upper and lower) of the sculpture’s 
body. Yet, the fact that the pre-signed control points were 
different at each stereopair in addition to the difficulty in 
recognising the natural control points from various views, did 
not allow estimation of the parameters with sufficient accuracy 
(rms of resulted coordinates was less than 8mm). So, each one 
of the 22 stereopairs was oriented separately. The DTM 
extraction was made manually, with point density of 1 -2 cm at 
the scale of the sculpture, since the automatic procedure fully 
failed in most cases, and a large number of breaklines was 
restituted. The outline of the surface was made with irregular 
TIN net (Figure 7). 
The merging process of all stereopairs was performed through 
characteristic tie points or natural control points, taking 
advantage of the relatively large overlapping of the stereopairs. 
Merging was not always easy to accomplish and finally 
systematic errors were introduced, as was confirmed by the 
comparison between the unified model with the equivalent 
derived through the laser scanning data. Also, despite the 
multiple photographic coverage of the sculpture there were 
some parts of the object which were not covered 
stereoscopically (for example, part of Hermes’ right ear). 
4.2 Laser Scanning Data Processing 
Editing of the acquired laser data comprises mainly the tasks of 
aligning and merging the scans. Alignment is a critical process 
to perform in order to bring all the scans of the statue to a 
common coordinate system. The registration of all scanned 
images was performed by applying the Triangle Mesh 
Registration, a variant of the Iterative Closet Point algorithm 
(ICP), which does not need targets in order to achieve high 
accuracy registrations. During the merging process, integration 
of the registered sets of surface measurements into a single 3D 
model was earned out using a hybrid approach of mesh 
integration with volumetric hole-filling. For these tasks, in- 
house software developed by Archaeoptics Ltd. was used 
(Tsakiri et al., 2003). Figure 8 shows two 3D views of the 
produced merged model of the statue. It is noted that these 
models are georeferenced to the same system as the 
photogrammetric models. 
Figure 8. Typical 3D views of the merged model of the statue 
4.3 Combined Use 
The common products of digital photogrammetric procedures 
are vector (line drawings, DTM) and raster (orthoimages) data 
which are produced with high accuracy. On the other hand, the 
emergence of laser scanning has benefited cultural heritage 
applications in that is a fully automated process, but without 
necessarily having directly out the above products. However, 
the cloud points form at once a 1:1 scaled 3D geometric model 
of the object compared to the initial scaled model produced by 
photogrammetry. It is therefore un uncomplicated task to 
obtain, in a time-efficient manner, all the products such as 
profiles and sections, lines and polylines, etc expected by the 
end-users, in addition to solid 3D model production in a variety 
of formats (many of them acceptable from CAD environments). 
Once the 3D models of objects are developed, the user can 
easily perform some basic interpretation using a variety of 
freeware viewers (e.g. 3D-Exploration of Right Hemisphere, 
SpinFire Professional, etc) which include easy-to-use tools that 
allow creation of sections with levels at any inclination and 
measurement of distances on the object. Figure 9 gives an 
example (not to scale) of such an editing of the Hermes 3D 
solid model. 
Through the combined use of photogrammetric and scanning 
data, the geometry of any kind of object can be fully captured
	        
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