Abstract

Historical terrestrial images are the only visual sources documenting alpine environments shortly after the end of the Little Ice Age. Despite their unique value, they are largely unused for quantifying environmental changes because of the difficult and time-consuming estimation of the unknown camera parameters. For most images large parts of the captured scenery have vastly changed over time, making automatic feature point matching infeasible. In contrast, the visible image horizon seems to remain stable over time and hence, appears to be a suitable feature for image orientation. Since the focal length is unknown for historical terrestrial images, existing methods, focusing solely on estimating the exterior orientation of recent imagery, can not be applied. Accordingly, it was investigated if the horizon is suitable to estimate both the interior and exterior orientation of historical terrestrial images, with an accuracy comparable to manually oriented images. In a first step, the whole horizon was used to approximate the unknown camera parameters, reducing the potential search space. In the subsequent spatial resection these approximations were further refined using salient points along the horizon. We evaluated our approach using 204 manually oriented reference images. With the proposed method the accuracy of the estimated exterior orientation could be significantly improved compared to previous works. Additionally, the unknown focal length was estimated within 5% of the true focal length for 75% of the images. As historical terrestrial images are commonly used for monoplotting, the accuracy for 2400 manually selected checkpoints was evaluated. This analysis showed that for 63% of the images the same accuracy as with manually oriented images was achieved. For additional 22% the estimated camera parameters were still accurate enough to serve as initial estimates for a subsequent manual orientation. In 15% of the images our method completely failed. Due to the vastly changing scenery and oblique viewing geometry, finding the initial camera parameters, in our experience, is often the most challenging and time consuming step during manual orientation of historical images. Hence, in 85% of the images this initial step can be replaced with our method, leading to a significantly reduced effort for orienting whole collections of historical terrestrial images.

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