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E-raamat: Spatial Technology and Archaeology: The Archaeological Applications of GIS [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

(University of Southampton, UK), (University of Leicester, UK)
  • Formaat: 288 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Jan-2002
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780429196027
  • Taylor & Francis e-raamat
  • Hind: 193,88 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Tavahind: 276,97 €
  • Säästad 30%
  • Formaat: 288 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Jan-2002
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780429196027
Geographical Information Systems (GIS) and related spatial technologies have a new and powerful role to play in archaeological interpretation. Beginning with a conceptual approach to the representation of space adopted by GIS, this book examines spatial databases; the acquisition and compilation of data; the analytical compilation of data; the analytical functionality of GIS; and the creation and utilization of critical foundation data layers such as the Digital Elevation Model (DEM). The ways in which GIS can most usefully facilitate archaeological analysis and interpretation are then explored particularly as a tool for the management of archaeological resources. Formal analysis of archaeological material, and the use of trend surface, contouring and interpolation procedures are considered along with predictive modeling analysis of visibility and intervisibility. Finally there is a discussion of leading-edge issues, including three-dimensional GIS, object-oriented GIS, the relationship between GIS and 'Virtual Reality' technologies, and the integration of GIS with distributed systems and the Internet.
The approach is light, and technical detail is kept to a minimum, recognizing that most readers are simply interested in using GIS effectively. The text is carefully illustrated with worked case-studies using archaeological data. Spatial Technology and Archaeology provides a single reference source for archaeologists, students, professionals, and academics in archaeology as well as those in anthropology and related disciplines.

Beginning with a conceptual approach to the representation of space adopted by GIS, this book examines spatial databases, the acquisition and compilation of data, the analytical compilation of data, the analytical functionality of GIS, and the creation and utilization of critical foundation data layers such as the Digital Elevation Model (DEM). The approach is light, technical detail is kept to a minimum, and the text is illustrated with worked case-studies using archaeological data. Spatial Technology and Archaeology provides a reference for archaeologists, students, professionals, and academics in archaeology as well as those in anthropology and related disciplines.
List of Figures
xi
List of Tables
xiv
Preface xv
Acknowledgements xvii
Archaeology, Space and Gis
1(22)
Spatial information and archaeology
3(1)
Thinking about space
4(2)
Neutral space and quantification
6(2)
Meaningful spaces
8(1)
What is a GIS?
9(1)
An anatomy lesson
10(3)
Where did GIS come from?
13(3)
What does it do that makes it so attractive to archaeologists?
16(2)
The development of GIS applications in archaeology
18(2)
Conclusion
20(3)
The Spatial Database
23(36)
How does a spatial database differ from a traditional database?
23(2)
Thematic mapping and georeferencing
25(3)
Projection systems
28(3)
Further complications
31(1)
Spatial data models and data structures
32(2)
Vector data structures
34(2)
An example of a `Simple' vector structure
36(14)
Raster data layers
50(6)
Which is best---vector or raster?
56(1)
A note on thematic mapping
57(1)
Conclusion
57(1)
Further information
58(1)
Acquiring and Integrating Data
59(30)
Sources of spatial data
59(1)
Sources of attribute data
60(1)
Clarifying the relationship between spatial and attribute
60(2)
Integrating spatial information---map-based data
62(7)
Integrating spatial information---co-ordinates
69(2)
Integrating spatial information---survey data
71(3)
Integrating spatial information---images
74(7)
Integrating spatial information---existing digital resources
81(1)
Integrating attribute data
82(1)
Data quality
83(3)
Metadata and interoperability
86(1)
Conclusion
87(2)
Manipulating Spatial Data
89(18)
This is where the fun starts
89(1)
Searching the spatial database
90(4)
Summaries
94(4)
Simple transformations of a single data theme
98(6)
Spatial data modelling
104(3)
Digital Elevation Models
107(18)
Uses of elevation models
107(1)
Elevation data in maps
108(2)
Storing elevation data in GIS
110(3)
Creating elevation models
113(7)
Products of elevation models
120(3)
Visualisation
123(1)
Summary
123(2)
Beginning to Quantify Spatial Patterns
125(22)
What is spatial analysis?
126(1)
Identifying structure when we only have points
127(4)
Spatial structure among points that have values
131(1)
Spatial structure in area and continuous data
132(2)
Structure in lines and networks
134(2)
Comparing points with spatial variables: one- and two-sample tests
136(3)
Relationships between different kinds of spatial observations
139(3)
Exploratory Data Analysis
142(4)
And there is more ...
146(1)
Spatial analysis?
146(1)
Sites, Territories and Distance
147(18)
Buffers, corridors and proximity surfaces
148(1)
Voronoi tessellation and Delaunay triangulation
149(2)
Cost and time surfaces
151(8)
Site catchment analysis and GIS
159(3)
Conclusion
162(3)
Location Models and Prediction
165(18)
Deductive and inductive approaches
166(1)
Inputs and outputs
166(3)
Rule-based approaches
169(2)
Regression-based approaches
171(5)
An example: predictive modelling in action
176(2)
Methodological issues in predictive modelling
178(1)
The prediction predicament: theoretical differences of opinion
179(1)
Conclusions
180(3)
Trend Surface and Interpolation
183(18)
Characteristics of interpolators
184(1)
Point data
185(2)
Trend surface analysis
187(3)
Approaches that use triangulation
190(2)
Approaches that use splines
192(1)
Numerical approximation
193(2)
Geostatistics and Kriging
195(4)
Summary
199(2)
Visibility Analysis and Archaeology
201(16)
The importance of visibility in archaeological analysis
201(1)
Archaeological approaches to visibility
202(2)
How does the GIS calculate visibility?
204(2)
Visibility within samples of sites---the cumulative viewshed
206(1)
Visibility of groups of sites---multiple and cumulative viewsheds
207(2)
Problems with viewshed analysis
209(1)
Intervisibility and reciprocity
210(2)
How archaeologists have applied visibility analyses
212(2)
Critiques and developments
214(3)
Cultural Resource Management
217(16)
The importance of spatial technology for heritage management
217(2)
Archaeological resource as continuous variation
219(2)
Reality: the antidote to GIS
221(3)
Seeing the wood for the trees: Dolmen database and GIS
224(3)
Regional heritage management: Hampshire County Council
227(3)
National and supra-national contexts
230(1)
Conclusions: recommendations for the adoption of GIS
231(2)
Future Directions
233(14)
The current state of GIS applications within archaeology
233(4)
The developing shape of GIS applications within archaeology
237(1)
Technological development of GIS
238(1)
Object-Oriented GIS (OO-GIS)
238(3)
Multi-dimensional GIS (3D-GIS)
241(1)
Temporal GIS (TGIS)
242(1)
Technological convergence and field archaeology
243(2)
Building a research community
245(2)
References 247(18)
Index 265


David Wheatley, Mark Gillings