VOLUME 72, NUMBER 3
PHOTOGRAMMETRIC ENGINEERING & REMOTE
SENSING
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR PHOTOGRAMMETRY
AND REMOTE SENSING
The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM), flown aboard Space Shuttle,
Endeavour in February 2000, acquired elevation measurements for nearly all of Earth’s landmass between
60°N and 56°S latitudes. SRTM data were used to generate this view of the Crater Highlands along the
East African Rift in Tanzania. Landforms are depicted with colored height and shaded relief, using a vertical
exaggeration of 2X and a southwestwardly look direction.
Lake Eyasi is depicted in blue at the top of the image, and a smaller lake occurs in Ngorongoro Crater.
Near the image center, elevations peak at 3648 meters
at Mount Loolmalasin, about 2800 meters above
the adjacent rift valley. The view continues forward
to Mount Longido and the Meto Hills.
Tectonics, volcanism, landslides, erosion and deposition
- and their interactions - are all very evident
in this view. For many areas of the world SRTM data
provide the fi rst detailed three-dimensional observation
of landforms at regional scales.
Columns & Updates
217 Grids and Datums — Department of
Guiana (Adobe PDF 122Kb)
219 Headquarters News — ASPRS Proposed
Bylaws Changes, Professor Gordon
Petrie Receives 2006 ASPRS Photogrammetric
Award (Fairchild), Robert H.
Brock, Jr. and Roy R. Mullen Selected as
ASPRS Honorary Members, The Robert
N. Colwell Memorial Fellowship Award (Adobe PDF 168Kb)
225 Industry News
Announcements 210 PE&RS Special Issue Call for Papers — Web and Wireless GIS
286 PE&RS Special Issue Call for Papers — Remote Sensing Data Fusion
Data editing requirements, procedures and assessments carried
out by the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency to
produce fi nished SRTM DTED® and related products disseminated
to the U.S. Government and the public at large.
Calculated terrain parameters computed from the SRTM mission
generally correlate with those computed from the National
Elevation Data Set, but systematic differences refl ect
the collection methods and true resolution of the data.
An evaluation of SRTM C-band DEMs in various terrain by
comparison with coincident ground and canopy top elevation
data obtained from the Laser Vegetation Imaging Scanner.