Snowdonian Mountain Resurvey Could Rewrite Map16/03/2010 |
| Ever since detailed maps of Snowdonia have been produced, the 3,002-foot Tryfan has been a member of the 14 peaks, the list of 3,000-foot Welsh mountains. But recently some experts have asked, "Does Tryfan really measure up?" The matter will be settled in June when three amateur mountain surveyors haul professional GPS equipment and computers to the summit. |
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Read more about: mapping GPS maps Supplier: Ordnance Survey More news from this supplier: Mystery Maps Marks First Birthday Contingency Planning with Ordnance Survey Mapping Joint Webinar About emapsite and Autodesk Ordnance Survey Staff Tweeting Their Ways Duke Opens New Ordnance Survey Head Office Royal Ordnance Survey Official Opening OS Joins Dept Business Innovation Geography Research Hub Opened OS On-demand Mapping Service Ordnance Survey in Tower of London Exhibition GMES Initial Operations (GIO) Land Monitoring Services Rugged Trimble Juno Series Olympic Planning Rerouting During Olympic Congestions Dutch Minister to Open Geospatial World Forum 2012 TatukGIS Developer Kernel 10 Upgrade Netcad Asia Convention Community Heritage Project Using GIS Visualisation Teaching Award for Russell G. Congalton ION Autonomous Snowplough Competition Winners GeoCore 2012 with Lidar API Comments (0): |
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The Alliance for Integrated Spatial Technologies at the University of South Florida, USA, recently worked with the Florida Park Service on a project to document the remains of several historic sugar-mill sites in the State Parks to create as-builts to be used in preservation and conservation of these resources. The FARO LS 880, along with GPS and total station georeferencing and colour imaging, was used on these projects.
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John Barnard, Graham Jackson and Myrddyn Phillips have a serious track record in surveying mountains, and their measurements are accepted by Ordnance Survey, the national