Difference between revisions of "Photography"
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[[File:Trenches.png|thumb|495px|Aerial photography gave a new vantage point on warfare, as seen in this image of soldiers in trenches during [[World War I]].]] | [[File:Trenches.png|thumb|495px|Aerial photography gave a new vantage point on warfare, as seen in this image of soldiers in trenches during [[World War I]].]] | ||
− | [[File:Contiguous aerial photographic map.png|thumb|Aerial photographs combined to form a continuous map.]] | + | [[File:Contiguous aerial photographic map.png|thumb|495px|Aerial photographs combined to form a continuous map. "The military and naval authorities of the warring countries have thousands of miles of photographic maps. These are kept up to the minute by the constant stream of aerophotographs brought to headquarters by aviators, where they are developed, studied, and the minutest changes noted on the map." ([[Textbook of Military Aeronautics]] (1918), p. 91.)]] |
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Revision as of 19:46, 10 December 2017

Aerial photography gave a new vantage point on warfare, as seen in this image of soldiers in trenches during World War I.

Aerial photographs combined to form a continuous map. "The military and naval authorities of the warring countries have thousands of miles of photographic maps. These are kept up to the minute by the constant stream of aerophotographs brought to headquarters by aviators, where they are developed, studied, and the minutest changes noted on the map." (Textbook of Military Aeronautics (1918), p. 91.)
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- Wikipedia: Aerial photography,
- Commons: Photographs by Eduard Spelterini