These medium resolution true color images represent the first color aerial photo "basemap" for the Commonwealth from MassGIS
4 km x 4 km MrSID images compressed from half-meter resolution GeoTiffs (10.5 MB each) Download these images Download from a spreadsheet of links Download an index shapefile with links View interactive map download instructions |
View the imagery in an ArcGIS Online map |
| Info for app developers |
These medium resolution true color images represent the first color aerial photo "basemap" for the Commonwealth from MassGIS. MassGIS (then part of the Executive Office of Environmental Affairs) and the Massachusetts Dept. of Transportation (then the Mass Highway Department) jointly funded the project. The photography for the mainland was captured in April 2001 when deciduous trees were mostly bare and the ground was generally free of snow. Photography for the Elizabeth Islands, Marthas Vineyard, and Nantucket (the "Islands") was captured in April 2003. Imagery is available for the entire state.
Production
Keystone
Aerial Surveys Inc. (KAS) of Philadelphia, PA acquired the
aerial photography for the entire project using Kodak AeroColor
2444 and AeroColor 2445 film. KAS used large format Leica RC-30
calibrated aerial mapping cameras employing forward motion
compensation and gyro-stabilized mounts. Each camera was also
equipped with a tie to the aircraft GPS receiver. The flying
altitude was approximately 15,000 feet to provide an original
photo scale of 1” = 2,500’. Endlap (forward overlap) was 60%,
except 80% in areas with tall structures, with (high) sidelap of
42%.
Ground and photogrammetric control (elevation model) for the
orthorectification of the aerial photography was available
statewide from the previous black-and-white 1:30,000 digital
orthophotography program conducted from 1992-2000 (see the Black and White Orthophoto datalayer description). The transfer of control from that project made the creation of these new data much more efficient, and assured a very high level of accuracy and compatibility.
The color negatives were scanned at 14 (12.5 Sells) microns and then inverted. The pixels were subsequently resampled to 0.5 meters ground resolution. Each pixel is coded with three 8-bit values representing the amounts of Red, Green, and Blue in the pixel. This produces a 24-bit RGB image. 8-bit (values ranging 0-255) Red, Green, and Blue values are packed into a single 24-bit identity. This allows for a maximum of 16,777,216 unique combinations of colors.
The imagery was radiometrically balanced prior to mosaicking. Only minor adjustments were made to the brightness and contrast. In the Intermap data, to avoid color distortion of land areas, color balancing was preceded by the removal of data in large bodies of water and the ocean. The water pixels were then merged back in. Since the Sells data did not contain large bodies of water (except for the Quabbin Reservoir), it was not processed in this manner.
The original 0.5 meter data was delivered to MassGIS in GeoTIFF format in orthoquad tiles representing 4 x 4 km on the ground (8000 rows x 8000 columns, equaling 64,000,000 pixels). Since each pixel contains 24 bits (3 bytes) of data, a full resolution image covering one orthoquad tile is approximately 192,000,000 bytes (183 Megabytes) in size. The tiles are based on the Orthophoto Index Grid and are named <sheet-id>.tif, where the <sheet-id> is the first 3 digits of the state plane XY coordinate pair for the lower right corner of each cell. Header files (named <sheet-id>.tfw) were also delivered for use in some GIS software. Imagery is georeferenced to Massachusetts State Plane (Lambert Conformal Conic Projection) NAD83 denominated in meters.
BSC Group fulfilled land survey requirements by performing highly precise ground control survey & independent verification and validation of spatial accuracy.
Distribution
See links above for download
Displaying the Images
Color Tone
Users should note that color tone and balance are always based
on personal preference. Image color processing frequently
involves a series of compromises with the overall objective
of providing images “with the appearance that people
expect”. Different hardware (monitor, video card, etc.),
software, and subjective perceptual differences can all
contribute to the perception of color in these images. Users
should also note that visual differences may be apparent between
the eastern and western images due to slightly different
processing methods by the two vendors.
Printing
Printing or plotting the images further introduces variability
due to different hardware and software systems, etc. Therefore
MassGIS is distributing the imagery as processed by our vendors
and leaving additional enhancement (e.g., contrast and
brightness adjustment, etc.) to the user. For example, ArcGIS
8.x users may want to set the display properties for these
images to "Resample during display using Cubic Convolution (for
continuous data)" in the Properties box, Display tab. (The Cubic
display method may result in gaps between adjacent images; ESRI
is working to fix this). Other options include adjusting the
Contrast and Brightness settings on the Effects Toolbar or
applying a stretch (e.g. Standard Deviation) to the images in
the Properties box, Symbology tab. Achieving results you like
may take exploring the capabilities of your software and
hardware, which can take considerable time.
Displaying with Feet-based data
Users may successfully display our meters-based imagery in
ArcView 3.x with other data in NAD83 Mass. State Plane feet
simply by changing the accompanying .sdw files and installing
the newest version of the file AVMrSID.dll.
The process is as follows:
1 - Open the .sdw file in a text editor and multiply all
values by 3.2808333316 and save
2 - Place the AVMrSID.dll file in the BIN32 folder where
ArcView is installed (e.g., C:\ESRI\AV_GIS30\ARCVIEW\BIN32)
If users wish to display the images with feet-based (or any)
data in ArcMap, load the image file (.sid) and the companion
.aux file and the data (if it has a .prj file, indicating a
defined spatial reference for vector data) and the images will
project on the fly (ArcMap does not use the .sdw).
Black areas in ArcView 3.x
Users may experience black areas adjacent to the mosaics in
ArcView GIS 3.x. In such cases, make the image themes active,
choose Theme > Properties, and select 'display' from the
'Extent Limit' dropdown.
Maintenance
The datalayer is maintained by MassGIS. Additional information concerning the technical details of the project may be available upon request.
MassGIS does not have any old aerial photographs (pre-1992). For information on such products please see https://lta.cr.usgs.gov/Single_Frame_Records.
Last Updated 5/25/2011
Items
| Contributor | |
|---|---|
| Modified Date | 2020-10-20 |
| Release Date | 2018-12-11 |
| Identifier | 897c07d9-b9ae-4efa-b9e7-1e52cb2ea721 |
| Spatial / Geographical Coverage Location | Massachusetts |
| License | |
| Author | |
| Contact Name | MassGIS |
| Contact Email | |
| Public Access Level | Public |
| Data Quality | False |
| Content Type | |
| Language | English (United States) |

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