Placeholder text
An Aerial Archaeologist's Logbook, 1970-1995
0 - Default Title
Description
Archaeological air-photography in Northern Britain differs from the better-documented South, in being less concentrated on crop-mark photography. In upland landscapes, fugitive extant earthworks, such as palisaded enclosures and 'cord-rig' agriculture, play an important role in settlement patterns, while certain classes of settlement, like underwater crannogs, are unique in Britain to Scotland. Other classes of field monument, like brochs and duns, may have substantial upstanding remains, but their Highlands and Islands location make many remote to access other than from the air. Optimizing photographic imagery of these sites presents particular problems unique to themselves.
In the past twenty years archaeological air photography has been revolutionized by the use of drones, and by the technical advantages of digital photography over film. Though the methodology recorded here now primarily has a historiographical relevance, therefore, the academic issues of settlement and landscape archaeology remain central to current research. The classes of field monument targeted were significantly different from the norm in Britain and Europe, and the tactics deployed in capturing optimum images accordingly were often unique.
Product details
Edition:
1
Number of Pages:
116
Release Date:
2025-11-17
Publication Date:
2025-11-25
Publisher:
Sidestone Press
Languages:
Original:
English
ISBN10:
9464263997
ISBN13:
9789464263992
GPSR Manufacturer Reference:
Weight:
694 g
Height:
215 cm
Width:
286 cm
Thickness:
12 cm
Currently sold out