Digital and Remote Sensing Archaeology
Digital and remote sensing archaeology uses geophysics, aerial and satellite imagery, spatial analysis, and three-dimensional recording to detect, map, and model the archaeological record, often without excavation.
Definition
The body of geophysical, remote-sensing, and computational methods used to locate, map, analyze, and model archaeological sites and landscapes, emphasizing non-invasive detection and digital data.
Scope
This area covers the largely non-invasive and computational methods of modern archaeology: geophysical prospection such as magnetometry and ground-penetrating radar, aerial and satellite remote sensing including lidar, geographic information systems and spatial analysis, and digital documentation through photogrammetry and three-dimensional modeling. It addresses how these technologies detect features and generate data for interpretation and management.
Sub-topics
Core questions
- How can buried and landscape-scale features be detected without excavation?
- What do geophysical and remote-sensing methods measure?
- How are spatial data analyzed and modeled to study sites and landscapes?
- How is the archaeological record digitally documented and reconstructed?
Key theories
- Non-invasive prospection
- The use of geophysical and remote-sensing techniques to detect subsurface and surface features by their physical contrasts, allowing sites to be mapped without disturbing them.
- Spatial and landscape analysis
- The application of GIS and remote sensing to model the spatial structure of sites and landscapes, supporting analyses of visibility, movement, and settlement patterning.
History
Aerial photography revealed archaeological features from the early 20th century, and geophysical prospection developed from the 1940s and 1950s. The spread of geographic information systems in the 1990s, followed by lidar, satellite imagery, and structure-from-motion photogrammetry, has made digital and remote-sensing methods central to discovery, analysis, and heritage management.
Debates
- Detection versus interpretation
- As technologies generate ever more data and detect more features, scholars debate how far remote sensing and geophysics can interpret, rather than merely locate, archaeology without ground-truthing through excavation.
Key figures
- Sarah Parcak
- Lawrence Conyers
- David Wheatley
- Chris Gaffney
Related topics
Seminal works
- wheatleygillings2002
- conyers2013
- parcak2009
Frequently asked questions
- What is archaeological prospection?
- It is the use of non-invasive methods, such as geophysics and remote sensing, to locate and map archaeological features without digging.
- Can technology replace excavation?
- No; remote sensing and geophysics can detect and map features and reduce unnecessary digging, but excavation is still needed to date, sample, and verify what these methods reveal.