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National aerial photography program as a geographic information system resource

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Abstract

The National Aerial Photography Program (NAPP) is jointly funded by Federal agencies and States that choose to participate in a 50-50 cost sharing cooperative arrangement. The NAPP is designed to acquire black-and-white (B&W) or color infrared (CIR) photography at a scale of 1:40,000. The status of NAPP flying, now going into the first year of its second 5-year cycle, is reviewed to inform the user community of NAPP's coverage. The resolution, geometric quality and flight parameters are used to estimate the system's cartographic potential to produce orthophotoquads, digital elevation models, topographic maps and digital information to meet national map accuracy standards at 1:12,000 and 1:24,000-scale and serve as a geographic information system resource. Also, a technique is presented to compute the optimum scanning spot size (15 ??m) and storage required for converting the B&W or CIR photography to digital, machine-readable pixel form. The resulting digital NAPP data are suitable for a wide variety of new applications, including use in geographic information systems.
Publication type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Conference Paper
Title National aerial photography program as a geographic information system resource
Year Published 1991
Language English
Publisher Publ by ASPRS
Publisher location Bethesda, MD, United States
Larger Work Title GIS/LIS 1991 ACSM-ASPRS Fall Convention
Conference Title 1991 ACSM-ASPRS Fall Convention
Conference Location Atlanta, GA, USA
Conference Date 28 October 1991 through 1 November 1991
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