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Social sciences

Geography

Map work

Grade 9

Module 11

Photographs

MAP WORK

  • Photographs?
  1. Why do geographers make use of photographs?

It is quite difficult for someone who has never visited a particular place to form an idea of what such a place might be like. A map is a wonderful aid, but one should keep in mind that maps record different phenomena by means of mapping symbols. This is why photographs can provide a much better image of particular phenomena in places that are far away. The viewer is able to SEE the landscape and the different phenomena that occur in it.

  1. So what is a photograph?

It is a manageable, understandable and realistic miniature image of phenomena that is captured by means of a camera.

2. Different kinds of photographs.

Photographs are classified according to their colour and the angle from which they are taken. Black-and-white photographs are generally used in Geography and the viewer has to rely on his or her experience to know that plants, for instance, are green. Colour photographs are much more true to life, but are expensive.

Different types of photographs are differentiated according to the angle from which they are taken. You got to know some of them in Grade 7.

  1. Horizontal photographs:

Objects in the foreground of the photograph seem bigger because they are closer to the camera lens. The same kind of object, e.g. a two-storey building, would seem much smaller if it were further from the lens. Behind the closer objects there will be areas that are not visible at all. These areas are known as the hidden ground. (Think of a class photo, for instance: if you stand right behind another learner, you will not be visible in the photograph; you will be part of the “hidden ground”.)

  1. Oblique aerial photographs:

These photographs are taken from high mountains, buildings or aeroplanes with a camera that is held at an angle to photograph something below. This kind of photograph shows features of the landscape from a reasonably familiar angle and will have much less hidden ground than a horizontal photograph.

  1. High-angled oblique aerial photographs:

If the camera’s axis is tilted away from the vertical axis at a wide angle (60°+), we obtain a high-angled oblique aerial photograph. The horizon will still be visible on the photograph, and there will be almost as much hidden ground as in a horizontal photograph.

  1. Low-angled oblique aerial photographs:

If the camera’s axis is tilted away from the vertical axis at a smaller angle (±30°), we obtain a low-angled oblique aerial photograph. The horizon will not be visible on the photograph at all and the amount of hidden ground will be much less.

  1. Vertical aerial photographs:

Vertical aerial photographs are used for drawing maps because the image that they provide is the same as that of a map. They are taken perpendicularly from above with a camera that is mounted on the undercarriage of an aeroplane. The optical axis of the camera therefore forms a 90° angle with the surface of the earth.

  1. Vertical aerial photographs have many advantages for geographers:

The scale of the photograph is accurate all over and objects can be drawn accurately.

It shows all features exactly as they appear from above.

There is no hidden ground.

The layout of roads and railways is clear.

High trees and buildings can be recognized by the lengthy shadows that they cast.

Such photographs are used as the basis for assembling the 1 : 50 000 topographic maps and 1 : 10 000 orthophoto maps.

  1. How vertical aerial photographs are taken:

The camera is mounted below an aeroplane that flies at a consistent height above sea level. The aeroplane is flown from east to west or from west to east and the photographs are taken in strips. Each subsequent photograph in the strip overlaps the previous photograph by 60%.

As soon as the first strip of photographs has been taken, the aeroplane is turned around and the next strip of photographs is taken from the opposite direction. These two strips have a 30% overlap.

In South Africa, such photographs are taken between 10h00 and 13h00, mainly during summer. Cloudy and hazy days are not suitable for this kind of photography, because important information may be hidden.

Do not take it for granted that the top edge of an aerial photograph shows what is in the north. Maps usually present north at the top, but a photograph is not a map!

Considering that the aeroplane flies from east to west at first and then from west to east, can you explain why the printing on the photograph sometimes is normal and sometimes upside down?

Assessment

Learning Outcomes(LOs)
LO 1
Geographical EnquiryThe learner will be able to use enquiry skills to investigate geographical and environmental concepts and processes.
Assessment Standards(ASs)
We know this when the learner:
1.2 asks questions that are relevant for identifying sources;
1.3 draws conclusions and makes analyses to obtain information from sources such as photographs, maps, atlases, graphs and statistics;
1.4 correlates information from different sources;
1.7 reports on knowledge that they have obtained through research, making use of different sources of information.
LO 2
Geographical Knowledge and UnderstandingThe learner will be able to demonstrate geographical and environmental knowledge and understanding.
We know this when the learner:
2.2 identifies ways in which Science and Technology have contributed a positively and negatively influence to development (people and resources.)

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Source:  OpenStax, Geography grade 9. OpenStax CNX. Sep 14, 2009 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11057/1.1
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