4.3 Article

Geophysical surveys as landscape archaeology

Journal

AMERICAN ANTIQUITY
Volume 68, Issue 3, Pages 435-457

Publisher

SOC AMER ARCHAEOLOGY
DOI: 10.2307/3557103

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Recent advances in technology and practice allow geophysical surveys in archaeology to produce maps of subsurface features over large areas and in potentially great detail. It is shown through a series of case studies from two regions in North America that archaeo-geophysical surveys can produce primary information suitable for the study of site content, structure and organization, for examining spatial patterns and relationships, and for directly confronting specific questions about a site and the past. Because large buried cultural landscapes call now be revealed, it is argued that an alternative perspective oil regional or landscape archaeology may be possible because space can be viewed in terms of tens of hectares as opposed to the tells of square meters typical of archaeological excavations. Moreover by placing focus on such buried features as dwellings, storage facilities, public structures, middens, fortifications, trails, or garden spaces that are not commonly revealed through most contemporary surface inspection methods, a richer view of archaeology, the past, and cultural landscapes call be achieved. Archaeo-geophysical surveys can also play all important role in Cultural Resource Management (CRM) contexts as feature discovery tools for focusing expensive excavations, thereby reducing the amount needed and lowering costs. Their utility is weighed against shovel test pits as a primitive and costly form of prospecting.

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