The Independent

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Environmen­talists are using the work of a Victorian aerial photograph­er to map a century of glacial loss in the French Alps – and the results are staggering, says Kieran Baxter

- Kieran Baxter is research assistant at the 3DVisLab at Duncan of Jordanston­e College of Art and Design at theUnivers­ity of Dundee. This article was first published in The Conversati­on (theconvers­ation.com)

Like a one-man Google Earth, Swiss aviation pioneer Eduard Spelterini flew a gas-filled balloon from the French town of Chamonix to Switzerlan­d on 8 August 1909 – a distance of 100 miles over the Alps. While the flight was extraordin­ary for being the first aerial crossing of the central Alps from west to east, it now holds a special significan­ce of which Spelterini was unaware. The balloonist was also a photograph­er who captured a series of glass-plate images of the Mer de Glace (“sea of ice”) glacier that descends from the Mont Blanc massif in a dramatic sweep.

Spelterini’s interest in recording the alpine landscape was both scientific and aesthetic, and the results are striking. This collection of images survives today as a record of the glacier that is unique in its detail and antiquity. But crucially, they can be used to measure how much this landscape has changed in the intervenin­g years. In 1909, no one could have guessed how significan­t these glaciers would become to environmen­tal science, or just how rapidly they would be affected by rising temperatur­es in the century that followed.

Digital analysis The flight over the Mer de Glace was unusual because Spelterini’s aerial photograph­s rarely focused on the

glaciers, instead more often framing the peaks and other geological features. He was also unaware that the distributi­on of his photograph­s along the balloon’s flight path, pictured below, would make excellent material for digital analysis more than 100 years later.

By identifyin­g common features in the photograph­s, which can in turn be linked to surveyed features in the landscape, a 3D representa­tion of both the balloon flight and the historical topography can be reconstruc­ted using photogramm­etry – the science of taking measuremen­ts from photograph­y. While the oblique angle of the photograph­s limits the measurable accuracy of the resulting data, compared to the vertical mapping photograph­s taken in the decades that followed, they still provide a unique and compelling glimpse into a past landscape. In Spelterini’s image below, the oblique aerial view taken at a sideways angle towards the horizon gives a sense of place that is part-way between the familiar ground level view and the high vertical perspectiv­e like that of a map. In the foreground the newly completed Montenvers cogwheel railway is visible, perched over the voluminous Mer de Glace glacier which leads the eye to the spires of the Mont Blanc massif in the background.

The photograph­s are carefully composed, designed to serve as both record and artwork. Their oblique angle makes them less abstracted and more relatable, despite their height above the ground and the scale of the landscape they depict. All of these factors make them an ideal point of reference for visualisin­g the changing nature of the alpine landscape.

Follow that balloon

In October 2017, a team of photograph­ers and researcher­s from the University of Dundee returned to Chamonix to replicate the path of the historic flight and recreate the sequence of photograph­s using a helicopter. Spelterini’s balloon rapidly ascended to around 2,000 metres above the Chamonix valley before passing Mer de Glace. Such heights are virtually inaccessib­le to unmanned drones, meaning that a manned aircraft was needed.

The results are documented in the 100 Year Time-Lapse Project. GPS coordinate­s derived digitally from Spelterini’s photograph­s were used to return to the same locations to capture current-day equivalent­s of both his individual photograph­s and the 3D surface reconstruc­tion. While the rate of change in the Mer de Glace glacier has been studied in great detail, using digital technology in this way allows for a visual comparison of the landscape then and now to reveal the staggering reduction in the ice surface that has taken place over the last century.

Today, visitors alighting at the Montenvers railway station are no longer confronted with the Mer de Glace

at close range, but instead look down upon a largely empty valley and debris-covered glacier far below. Here the ice surface has dropped around 100 metres compared to its height in 1909. Scientists have calculated that, overall, the glacier has lost around 700 million cubic metres of water since the beginning of the 20th century. While the facts and figures alone should be enough to narrate the impact that the previous century of greenhouse gas emissions have had on our climate and environmen­t, images like these help drive the point home. Eduard Spelterini was not just a pioneer of aviation but also of aerial photograph­y as a way of better understand­ing the natural world. His images capture an emotive sense of place while providing insights into aspects of the landscape that are not available from the ground.

Today, despite the heavy carbon footprint that comes with manned aviation, we continue to rely on aerial views to interpret our environmen­t, from Landsat satellite imagery to low-level drone photograph­y. By repurposin­g archival aerial photograph­s and continuing the legacy of photograph­ers like Spelterini, with the help of current technology, we can explore new and compelling ways to visualise our rapidly changing glacial landscapes.

As well as serving to convince hearts and minds in the present political debates surroundin­g climate change, these images will also form a poignant record of magnificen­t landscapes that will no longer be around for future generation­s to experience.

 ??  ?? Though more artful than scientific, the photos provide a unique glimpse into a past landscape (Eduard Spelterini)
Though more artful than scientific, the photos provide a unique glimpse into a past landscape (Eduard Spelterini)
 ??  ?? By comparing images from now and then, scientists have created a 3D representa­tion of how the landscape has changed (Dundee University)
By comparing images from now and then, scientists have created a 3D representa­tion of how the landscape has changed (Dundee University)
 ??  ?? By taking measuremen­ts from the photograph­y, scientists have reconstruc­ted the balloon’s flight (James Gentles)
By taking measuremen­ts from the photograph­y, scientists have reconstruc­ted the balloon’s flight (James Gentles)

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