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The Presentation of High Ground Information

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 October 1964

T. Freer
Affiliation:
(British European Airways)

Extract

Information on the shape of the ground can be required in the air for two quite different reasons. First, for visual fixing of position, that is to say, for ‘map-reading’; and second, for ensuring terrain clearance when flying on instruments. Obviously the second is of far greater importance than the first, yet unfortunately it is the first that, for historical reasons, has received the greater attention from cartographers; this paper will try to redress the balance, and indicate where action is needed at the present time to satisfy the second requirement.

Type
The Safety and Reliability of Sea and Air Transport—II
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1964

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References

REFERENCES

Freer, T., (1953). A new aeronautical plotting chart. This Journal, 6, 358.Google Scholar
Freer, T., (1958). Instrument approach and landing charts, Flugnavigation und Flugsicherung, 5, 67 (Report of the International Meeting held in Berlin by the Ausschuss für Funkortung).Google Scholar
Freer, T., (1963). Contour-envelopes, Flight International, 84, 661.Google Scholar