Old Mine Map Georeferencing: Case of Marsigli’s 1696 Map of the Smolník Mines

Historical maps represent a unique and irreplaceable source of information about the history of a country, be it large (historical) regions, individual geomorphological units or specifically defined sites. Using a methodologically correct, critical historical analysis, old maps provide both the hori...

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Veröffentlicht in:ISPRS international journal of geo-information 2023-08, Vol.12 (8), p.345
Hauptverfasser: Hvizdák, Ladislav, Tometzová, Dana, Iannaccone, Barbora, Šoltésová, Marieta, Domaracká, Lucia, Kyšeľa, Kamil
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Historical maps represent a unique and irreplaceable source of information about the history of a country, be it large (historical) regions, individual geomorphological units or specifically defined sites. Using a methodologically correct, critical historical analysis, old maps provide both the horizontal and vertical analysis of a landscape and its transformation in different time periods. These maps represent some of the oldest, but relatively easily accessible, historical pictorial documents (plausibly) depicting historical landscapes. This study provides the methodology for processing and georeferencing old mine maps with the possibility of their further use for the purposes of mining tourism. The 1696 Marsigli mine map has been chosen for the case study in question. It depicts a cross-section of the copper mines in Smolník and shows in detail the process of cementation water mining. Through an analysis and a detailed study, two-dimensional parts of a georeferenced historical map have been plotted in Google Earth’s three-dimensional space.
ISSN:2220-9964
2220-9964
DOI:10.3390/ijgi12080345