Georeferencing Strategies in Very Shallow Waters: A Novel GCPs Survey Approach for UCH Photogrammetric Documentation

The growing interest of the scientific community in surveying and monitoring submerged assets is motivated by the increasing demand for high-resolution products with certified accuracies. While many instrumental and methodological solutions for documenting, monitoring, and studying archaeological an...

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Published in:Remote Sensing
Main Authors: Alessio Calantropio, Filiberto Chiabrando
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2024-04-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/16/8/1313
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author Alessio Calantropio
Filiberto Chiabrando
author_facet Alessio Calantropio
Filiberto Chiabrando
author_sort Alessio Calantropio
collection DOAJ
container_title Remote Sensing
description The growing interest of the scientific community in surveying and monitoring submerged assets is motivated by the increasing demand for high-resolution products with certified accuracies. While many instrumental and methodological solutions for documenting, monitoring, and studying archaeological and cultural heritage through geomatics techniques are already available for the terrestrial environment, the challenge remains open to the underwater context. High-resolution capability and accurate positioning are still difficult to achieve in these environments. This paper discusses the limitations of positioning and georeferencing techniques in the underwater environment. It explores how existing methods and new instruments can be used to perform accurate topographic surveys of ground control points (GCPs) in very shallow waters (within 5 m depths), which can support the photogrammetric reconstruction of underwater assets. This research presents two innovative prototypes: a self-built plastic marker for topographic use in the underwater environment and a self-built aluminum pole for topographic use in the marine environment. The prototypes are tested and validated with a tilt-compensating smart antenna to reduce planar and altimetric errors when the pole is not perfectly level and to work independently of the shore proximity required when using a total station to perform said measurements.
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spelling doaj-art-7ea6fcbbceaa48eeab7cb6f53cae03232025-08-20T00:28:27ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922024-04-01168131310.3390/rs16081313Georeferencing Strategies in Very Shallow Waters: A Novel GCPs Survey Approach for UCH Photogrammetric DocumentationAlessio Calantropio0Filiberto Chiabrando1Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Sassari, 07100 Sassari, ItalyDepartment of Architecture and Design, Polytechnic University of Turin, 10129 Turin, ItalyThe growing interest of the scientific community in surveying and monitoring submerged assets is motivated by the increasing demand for high-resolution products with certified accuracies. While many instrumental and methodological solutions for documenting, monitoring, and studying archaeological and cultural heritage through geomatics techniques are already available for the terrestrial environment, the challenge remains open to the underwater context. High-resolution capability and accurate positioning are still difficult to achieve in these environments. This paper discusses the limitations of positioning and georeferencing techniques in the underwater environment. It explores how existing methods and new instruments can be used to perform accurate topographic surveys of ground control points (GCPs) in very shallow waters (within 5 m depths), which can support the photogrammetric reconstruction of underwater assets. This research presents two innovative prototypes: a self-built plastic marker for topographic use in the underwater environment and a self-built aluminum pole for topographic use in the marine environment. The prototypes are tested and validated with a tilt-compensating smart antenna to reduce planar and altimetric errors when the pole is not perfectly level and to work independently of the shore proximity required when using a total station to perform said measurements.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/16/8/1313underwater photogrammetryunderwater positioninggeospatial information (GI)shallow depth surveysGCPsunderwater cultural heritage
spellingShingle Alessio Calantropio
Filiberto Chiabrando
Georeferencing Strategies in Very Shallow Waters: A Novel GCPs Survey Approach for UCH Photogrammetric Documentation
underwater photogrammetry
underwater positioning
geospatial information (GI)
shallow depth surveys
GCPs
underwater cultural heritage
title Georeferencing Strategies in Very Shallow Waters: A Novel GCPs Survey Approach for UCH Photogrammetric Documentation
title_full Georeferencing Strategies in Very Shallow Waters: A Novel GCPs Survey Approach for UCH Photogrammetric Documentation
title_fullStr Georeferencing Strategies in Very Shallow Waters: A Novel GCPs Survey Approach for UCH Photogrammetric Documentation
title_full_unstemmed Georeferencing Strategies in Very Shallow Waters: A Novel GCPs Survey Approach for UCH Photogrammetric Documentation
title_short Georeferencing Strategies in Very Shallow Waters: A Novel GCPs Survey Approach for UCH Photogrammetric Documentation
title_sort georeferencing strategies in very shallow waters a novel gcps survey approach for uch photogrammetric documentation
topic underwater photogrammetry
underwater positioning
geospatial information (GI)
shallow depth surveys
GCPs
underwater cultural heritage
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/16/8/1313
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