14th September 2012, 12:21 PM
Kevin, what an interesting thesis - thanks for providing a link! I too would like to see how we integrate the "wrinkly cornflakes" of photogrammetry & laser scanning back into the main strat record - I haven't seen this capability in GIS-based systems. Perhaps a CAD-based dataset, using the GIS functions of Civil 3D (or Kubit's MonuMap?) might get us there? The real issue however is that the image-based models still require interpretation and comparison with the real thing, so to be of use in most field situations you really want to be processing it on site in real time. And what are we wanting as output? Archaeology tends to dwell on edges rather than surfaces because the edges tell us about form (& thus function) as well as hierarchy of creation. If we use photogrammetry just to get outlines, is it truly cost-effective?
By the way, I was surprised to see no mention of Paul Bryan's 2005-6 rock-art project, or the EH tunnelling at Silbury, where Topcon's PI-3000 software was used to create models from stereo pairs of images. (Important mainly because it was an early entry into the "sub-?5k, runs on a laptop" software market...)
By the way, I was surprised to see no mention of Paul Bryan's 2005-6 rock-art project, or the EH tunnelling at Silbury, where Topcon's PI-3000 software was used to create models from stereo pairs of images. (Important mainly because it was an early entry into the "sub-?5k, runs on a laptop" software market...)