Multispectral archaeological prospection : a case study in the Dinar region, central western Turkey
2010
The aim of this work is to explore a method of archaeological site prospection
using satellite-collected multispectral imagery in order to provide the
archaeological community with a comprehensive, quantitative case study of an
efficient tool to survey archaeological landscapes in the Near East and beyond.
To that end, after a brief introduction a review of previous predictive modelling
and satellite imagery applications in archaeology is presented to provide context
to the methodological approach taken here. This is followed by a discussion of
site detection, prediction, recovery and interpretation in order to consider
problematic issues that might arise during each of these phases and negatively
impact results; based on this foundation, a method of multispectral archaeological
prospection is proposed. Next the primary case study region of the Dinar Basin in
central western Turkey is presented in terms of the physical geography and
palaeoclimatology as well as known settlement and inter-regional interaction from
prehistory to the present to provide archaeological context to the study region and
to better understand what might be expected in the archaeological record, what
impact later settlement systems might have had on earlier ones, and how this
might affect the proposed method of multispectral site detection and prediction.
With this foundation, the methodology is applied and the results tested in the field
with initial results presented; a consideration of settlement location relative to a
number of variables reflecting the local environment and the sites’ relation to it,
along with a consideration of the surface artefacts and overall surface artefact
densities seen at the discovered sites, closes the analysis as a first interpretation of
the site location results. Following on, the portability of this multispectral
approach to site detection is tested in two other regions of the Near East, in the
environs of Catalhoyuk in central Turkey and Ur in southern Iraq. Finally, the
results of all of the work above are considered and discussed together to assess the
validity and achievements of the research, and the conclusion outlines possible
future directions to build on the work presented here. Volume two provides the
associated tables and figures and an appendix detailing all of the previously
known and newly recorded sites and findspots in the Dinar Basin.
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