Possibly of interest. Is anyone using UAVs, in the UK, to gather material
for Wikipedia, Commons, or another project?
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Archaeology Data Service" <katie.gr...@york.ac.uk>
Date: Nov 10, 2014 1:59 PM
Subject: New Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Guide to Good Practice
To: <ads-...@jiscmail.ac.uk>

Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) are a ‘disruptive technology’, a technology
that forces us to rethink how we do (or used to do) things – from
protecting white rhino to delivering pizza. Everyone who needs a bird’s eye
view is now wondering how this technology can help them; farmers,
structural engineers, ecologists and, of course, archaeologists.

In theory, even a very minor archaeological site can now benefit from its
very own aerial survey. But while the possibilities for archaeology are
immensely exciting, many of the actual results are still disappointing;
blurry aerial photos, images which may be pretty but which can’t be
georeferenced and expensive cameras hitting the ground at terminal velocity.

Stephen Gray from the University of Bristol’s Department of Archaeology has
written a much-needed good practice guide to conducting an archaeological
survey using a UAV. The guide is the result of months of research and field
work; it sets out a standard and safe approach which can be carried out
using inexpensive equipment.

Part One of the guide, produced in collaboration with Jisc, suggests good
practice when collecting data.
http://www.jiscdigitalmedia.ac.uk/infokit/3d/uav-survey

Part Two is published by the Archaeology Data Service and is focused on the
sharing and preservation of low-altitude aerial survey data.
http://guides.archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/g2gp/AerialPht_UAV
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