Archaeology And Geographic Information Systems: A European PerspectiveGary R Lock, G Stancic CRC Press, 1995 M07 11 - 319 pages Geographic information systems GIS applications are viewed with increasing interest by the archaeology community and this book, with its diversity of topics and authorship, should be a useful resource. Complementing the volume "Interpreting Space" Taylor & Francis, 1990, which focused on North American archaeology, this title further develops themes within a specifically - though not exclusively - European context.; It is apparent that there are fundamental differences between North American and European archaeological uses of GIS. Primarily these differences lie in the types of evidence for past landscapes that are available for study in the two continents, and secondly in the different approaches to archaeology and specifically the theory and practice of landscape archaeology. This title centres on the role of archaeological theory in cultural resource management CRM and in GIS applications generally. It showcases the important debate which takes the emphasis away from the technology of GIS and places it back within the central concerns of archaeology and particularly European archaeology.; "Archaeology and GIS" includes material on such concerns as CRM applications, landscape archaeology, intra-site applications and explicitly theoretical concerns, thus representing the state of GIS applications in European archaeology. Contributions come from countries such as France, Italy, Hungary, UK, USA, the Netherlands, the Czech Republic, Spain, Slovenia and Finland. |
Contents
the North American experience in archae | 1 |
a European agenda | 27 |
van Leusen | 28 |
will an objectspacetime GISAIS become a scienti | 43 |
the Mediterranean evidence | 55 |
Flood dynamics and settlement in the Tisza valley of northeast | 67 |
Archaeological Institute of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences Úri Utaca 49 1250 | 95 |
The spatial analysis of Bell Beaker sites in the Madrid region of Spain | 101 |
the case study of | 231 |
the Perseus GIS | 239 |
The potential of GISbased studies of Iron Age cultural landscapes | 249 |
GIS applications at the Hungarian National Museum Department | 261 |
a cautionary tale from Shepton Mallet Somerset | 269 |
Spatial relations in Roman Iron Age settlements in the Assendelver | 287 |
Stichting RAAP Universiteit van Amsterdam Plantage Muidergracht 14 1018 | 288 |
Another way to deal with maps in archaeological GIS | 301 |
an application of GIS to the Vinořský | 117 |
Beyond GIS | 133 |
Perceiving time and space in an isostatically rising region | 141 |
GIS on different spatial levels and the Neolithization process in | 153 |
a GISbased method for investigating | 171 |
Some criteria for modelling socioeconomic activities in the Bronze | 187 |
a personal perspective | 211 |
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Common terms and phrases
activities Åland approach archae archaeological context archaeological data archaeological record archaeological resources archaeological sites barrows basin Bronze Age burial cairns chambered cairns context cultural landscape database deposits distance distribution drainage basin edge elevation environment environmental example excavation factors Figure finds Gaffney Gatas Geographic Information Systems GIS and Archaeology GIS applications graphic human Hvar IDRISI important integrated Interpreting Space intra-site Iron Age km² Kvamme land landscape archaeology landscape rooms Leusen loess Methods in Archaeology monuments mounds Neolithic ological patterns Pausanias Perseus phase Piraeus Polders polygons possible potential pottery prehistoric problems region relationship river rock art Roman period sample settlement Shepton Mallet simulation social soil spatial analysis Stančič statistical structures study area suggests surface survey Taylor & Francis terramara three-dimensional tion Tisza tool types valley variables viewshed visualization