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1.2.2: Aerial Photographs and Remote Sensing

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    21635
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    Aerial and satellite images

    For years, geographers have used aerial photographs to study the Earth’s surface. In many ways air photographs are better than maps. They provide us with a real world view of the earth’s surface, unlike a map which is a representation of the real world. After correction for the fact that the photos are often not perfect, aerial photographs can be used to make the same measurements that we make on a map, as they too are a scaled image of the surface.

    Gangotri_Glacier_Keep_This.jpg
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Aerial photograph of Gangotri Glacier, India (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\) shows the rugged terrain one finds in the Gangotri Glacier. North is at the top of the photograph. The Gangotri glacier and others around it are found in favorable sites for snow and ice accumulation. Although it is retreating, this glaciers remains clearly active. The main glacier flows from the middle bottom of the image to the north, and is identified by its grey color with irregular texture. Smaller, snow-covered white and partially blue glaciers are visible flowing south from the top of the image. These start at higher altitude than the part of the Gangotri glacier that is visible here. The abrupt end of the Gangotri glacier at a lake-like feature near the middle of the screen is the famous Gaumukh, the source of the Ganges river.

    To get a much larger view of the earth’s surface features, geographers have turned to using remotely sensed data from satellites. Satellite sensors scan the surface and send it back to earth. The digital data received is processed in a variety of ways: image classification, deep learning, image processing, image enhancement, neural networks, etc.


    1.2.2: Aerial Photographs and Remote Sensing is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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