Revisiting the determination of Mount Olympus Height(Greece)
作者机构:Genie LabDepartment of Surveying and Geoinformatics EngineeringInternational Hellenic UniversityTerma Magnisias62124SerresGreece EO.Lab Department of Physical&Environmental GeographyAristotle University54124ThessalonikiGreece Geoservice LTDEirinis 14 Str55236ThessalonikiGreece Nomotechniki PieriasDim.Dimadi 560100KateriniGreece Paths of GreeceKarneadou 34-36Athens10676Greece Laboratory of Gravity Field Research and Applications-GravLab Aristotle University of ThessalonikiUniversity Box 44054124ThessalonikiGreece Faculty of Science Department of Applied Geoinformatics and CartographyCharles UniversityAlbertov 612843Praha 2Czechia Balkan CenterCenter for Interdisciplinary Research and Innovation(CIRI-AUTH)AUTH Campus54124ThessalonikiGreece
出 版 物:《Journal of Mountain Science》 (山地科学学报(英文))
年 卷 期:2023年第20卷第4期
页 面:1026-1034页
核心收录:
学科分类:08[工学] 081601[工学-大地测量学与测量工程] 0816[工学-测绘科学与技术]
基 金:financially supported by HEAL-Link
主 题:Olympus Greece Mountain height determination GNSS leveling Surveying
摘 要:The present study deals with the determination of Mount Olympus summit(Mytikas),exploiting modern observations such as Global Navigation Satellite Systems(GNSS)and existing geodetic *** last official Olympus height determination goes back 102 years by the Swiss surveyor *** then,only unofficial measurement campaigns have taken *** is a variety of released heights,which range from 2917 to 2919 *** September and October of 2022,we conducted a GNSS campaign,focusing on the area of highest Olympus *** precise GNSS measurements(accuracy of 1-3 cm),in conjunction with height information from Greece’s National Triangulation Network(5-10 cm accuracy)and an appropriate,recent geoid model(5-6 cm accuracy),we estimate through the so-called GNSS-levelling,the height of Olympus to 2917.727 m with respect to Greece’s officially accepted mean sea level and 2918.390 m with respect to the global vertical *** estimation of Olympus highest peak shows remarkable consistency at the level of 12.8 cm to that of *** in 1921.