Bandit
Well-Known Member
I worked at Scott Polar Research Institute during the Falklands War. One memory I have of that war was the MoD coming to us to get copies of the most up-to-date maps of the Falklands from our library! You'd have thought that the MoD would have had its own resources rather than having to scrape around University libraries. The resulting military maps are simply photo-enlargements of the maps they borrowed from us. If they'd asked us to help - and perhaps provided a few resources - we could have provided much better intelligence for them, as the existing maps were (and still are) of relatively poor quality.
There was a programme on the box recently about the Vulcan raid on Stanley airport where they tried to bomb the runway. The RAF did not have the maps so they had to use north hmisphere maps and draw on the relevant details themselves?
I assume that mapping using aircraft sonars, radars etc is much easier in this digital age than it was in the 80's which i assumed required a theodolite and a tape measure on the ground.