Jim,
At the slight dogleg just past the beginning of the fairway, the ground drops over 50 feet in less than 100 yards. Where does that happen in this photo?
I am pretty sure Bryan has said a number of times that he does not think the third green is visible in the Brown photo, but is actually off to the left of the left edge. Bryan?
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Bryan, My last post reminded me that I have an old Brownie 2A, basic box variety introduced in 1907, the kind in heavy use around this time. So I dug it out and did some quick measures. The negative size was 2 1/2" x 4 1/2." The distance from the lens to the film (focal length) looks like it about 4 5/8" inches.
Using the formula for calculating "angle of view" (thanks Wikipedia) and 118 mm as my focal length, I come up with a horizontal viewing angle of about 52 degrees and vertical viewing angle of only around 30 degrees. I know you disagree, but that looks about right to me. . Assuming it is . . .
Looking at your ground level google earth capture above (the one from the green) the center line looks like at about the left edge of the 4th fairway, and your ridge point along this line is at about 400 yards, is it not? If so, then we can calculate the horizontal viewing distance to each side extending perpendicular at this point to the center line. My trigonometry might be a little rusty, but I come up with about 195 yards each way, or 390 yards diagonal viewing width total. If so, then the viewing angle from the green and a photo taken with that camera would look something like this, wouldn't it?
If this was the camera from the tee and it was pointed directly at the left edge of the fairway, then the 2nd green and 3rd tee would most definitely have be in the photo, and not even near the left edge, much less off it. And if this was the camera, your assumed diagonal angle of vision is much too narrow. This is one thing I have been trying to explain.
Now before you or someone else simply says to swing the angle to the right, so as to cut off the 3rd tee, I don't think that works either. If you swing the camera angle right, you effectively move the 4th fairway well to the left, and this would bring the steep part of the ravine much more into view, but we cannot really see any steep part of the ravine in the photo, can we? This is issue I have been trying to point out to you guys.