Mapped by Chris Fastie
Cartographer: Chris Fastie
Published by gonzoearth
43.95346218767297 N, -72.99407666742056 E
208 views
Ground resolution: 10.0 cm/px
Capture date: 2012-09-22T00:00:00
Publication date: 2012-10-12T00:00:00
License: Public Domain
Mapped by Chris Fastie
Cartographer: Chris Fastie
Published by gonzoearth
43.95346218767297 N, -72.99407666742056 E
186 views
Ground resolution: 10.0 cm/px
Capture date: 2012-09-22T00:00:00
Publication date: 2012-10-12T00:00:00
License: Public Domain
Galen was operating the RC transmitter which allowed him to point the camera anywhere between the horizon and almost straight down and trigger the shutter of the S95. The hastily mounted Jeenode prevented the camera from tilting any farther down, so most of the vertical shots taken are not quite vertical. But Galen did a great job getting mapping coverage of most of the campus and also lots of attractive oblique shots of the early fall color and incredibly yellow historic buildings. Some of the shots are above in a gallery, and below is an embed from MapKnitter with 16 photos aligned into a reasonable facsimile of an orthophoto.
On Saturday evening the GPS and sensor data were passed around and in a flurry of Python code some 3D visualizations of the GPS data, and 2D graphs of the temperature, pressure, and altitude emerged. Those graphics might appear in a research note soon. Maybe some of them can be presented hovering over the MapKnitter map below which includes the entire surface area covered during the flight. To download a GeoTIFF, JPG, or tile set of the MapKnitter image, go here: https://mapknitter.org/map/view/breadloaf-leaffest.
The Bread Loaf Campus of Middlebury College in Ripton Vermont. Photos are from a 40 minute kite flight during which the Canon S95 could not point directly vertical, so most of the images are a bit oblique.
The Bread Loaf Campus of Middlebury College in Ripton Vermont. Photos are from a 40 minute kite flight during which the Canon S95 could not point directly vertical, so most of the images are a bit oblique.
1 Comments
http://publiclaboratory.org/notes/cfastie/9-26-2012/bread-loaf-ortho
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