TY - JOUR AU - Vest Sørensen, Erik AU - Bjerager, Morten AU - Citterio, Michele PY - 2015/07/07 Y2 - 2024/03/28 TI - Digital models based on images taken with handheld cameras – examples on land, from the sea and on ice JF - GEUS Bulletin JA - GEUS Bulletin VL - 33 IS - SE - RESEARCH ARTICLE | SHORT DO - 10.34194/geusb.v33.4513 UR - https://geusbulletin.org/index.php/geusb/article/view/4513 SP - 73-76 AB - <p>Geological outcrops can be comfortably modelled in three dimensions in the office using images from a handheld digital camera. Recent developments within the imaging techniques of Structure from Motion (Lowe 2004; Snavely <em>et al.</em> 2008; Fonstad <em>et al.</em> 2013) and photogrammetry (Hirschmüller 2005; James &amp; Robson 2012; Favalli <em>et al.</em> 2012) have made it easier and cheaper to construct so-called digital outcrop models using stereoscopic images from standard digital cameras. The digital outcrop model (Bellian <em>et al.</em> 2005) is a 3D representation of the outcrop surface and is often displayed in the form of a polygon mesh or a point cloud. In this paper we present three examples of such point clouds from images obtained with a handheld digital camera. The examples illustrate how outcrop topography or digital outcrop models can be constructed at different scales, with different accessibility and operational platforms. Two examples illustrate outcrop scales of metres to kilometres, with images obtained by walking along excavated exposures in the Faxe limestone quarry and from a boat sailing past the coastal cliff of Stevns Klint. The third example illustrates detailed micro-topography of ice and snow surfaces where the images were obtained from a snowmobile on an ice cap in A.P. Olsen Land, North-East Greenland.</p> ER -