Journal cover Journal topic
Proceedings of the ICA
Journal topic
Articles | Volume 4
https://doi.org/10.5194/ica-proc-4-69-2021
https://doi.org/10.5194/ica-proc-4-69-2021
03 Dec 2021
 | 03 Dec 2021

Content-based Image Retrieval for Map Georeferencing

Jonas Luft and Jochen Schiewe

Keywords: image analysis, automatic georeferencing, historical maps, VGI

Abstract. In recent years, libraries have made great progress in digitising troves of historical maps with high-resolution scanners. Providing user-friendly information access for cultural heritage through spatial search and webGIS requires georeferencing of the hundreds of thousands of digitised maps.

Georeferencing is usually done manually by finding “ground control points”, locations in the digital map image, whose identity is unambiguous and can easily be found in modern-day reference geodata/mapping data. To decide whether two symbols from different maps describe the same object, their semantic and spatial relations need to be matched. Automating this process is the only feasible way to georeference the immense quantities of maps in conceivable time. However, automated solutions for spatial matching quickly fail when faced with incomplete data – which is the greatest challenge when comparing maps of different ages or scales.

These problems can be overcome by computing map similarity in the image domain. Treating maps as a special case of image processing allows efficient and robust matching and thus identification of geographical regions without the need to explicitly model semantics. We propose a method to encode worldwide reference VGI mapping data as image features, allowing the construction of an efficient lookup index. With this index, content-based image retrieval can be used for both geolocating a given map for georeferencing with high accuracy. We demonstrate our approach on hundreds of map sheets of different historical topographical survey map series, successfully georeferencing most of them within mere seconds.

Publications Copernicus
Download
Citation