Abstract

Professional aerial photography missions are generally outside the reach of most students and faculty involved with teaching and research. Oblique aerial photography using handheld cameras for image acquisition from a light high‐wing aircraft offers an excellent learning experience for students in a first course in remote sensing and offers a useful research tool for graduate students and faculty engaged in environmental investigations. This paper is essentially a guide, covering all aspects of hand‐held camera aerial imaging and the subsequent processing needed to produce low‐obliques, stereograms, anaglyphs, and flight line mosaics. Scales, ground coverage distances, and stereogram and mosaic timing intervals, are included along with a section on the calculations used to produce these numbers. A list of additional resources concludes the paper.

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