Chapter 4

Quantitative Photography

Mary J. Thornbush and Sylvia E. Thornbush

Abstract

A recent, and what seems like a natural evolution, of photography has been for quantification. With modern cameras that can more realistically depict what is visible, it is possible to measure change using (digital) photography. This chapter considers various examples of the application of photography in the measurements of surface colouration (soiling) and the decay of weathering forms. Techniques developed by the first author are presented, and a case study on the application of the O-IDIP method is presented to convey photographic surveys for the quantification of stone surface colouration associated with biological colonisation on a string course in central Oxford.

Total Pages: 61-79 (19)

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