While the use of geographic information systems (GIS) has become commonplace within the discipline of archaeology, the potential of a big-data approach to GIS is yet to be fully exploited within historical archaeology. Archaeologists inspired by developments in the social sciences and humanities have recently called for new ways of conceptualizing GIS as a process that is more theoretically satisfying and methodologically effective in its applications to archaeology. We respond to these calls by proposing a new approach for GIS in historical archaeology, an historical spatial-data infrastructure (HSDI). We outline the progression from historical GIS to the construction of an HSDI and present a series of case studies that demonstrate how usi...
Even just a decade ago having a chapter dedicated to Geographical Information Systems (GIS) in a boo...
Geographic Information Systems (CIS) - computer systems for the manipulation and storage of spatial ...
To a greater or lesser extent, all historians make use of geographical information. This means that ...
While the use of geographic information systems (GIS) has become commonplace within the discipline o...
While a vibrant and growing research literature exists on the value of GIS to archaeology in general...
GIS has become an indispensable tool for archaeologists to organize, explore and analyse spatial dat...
The experiences in the field of the documentation and the information management to preserve archaeo...
Geographical Information Systems (GIS) is a rapidly developing archaeological method which is moving...
The diffusion of the use of Geographical Information Systems in archaeology has considerably increas...
We combine the Historical Spatial Data Infrastructure (HSDI) concept developed within spatial histor...
Postindustrial urban landscapes are large-scale, complex manifestations of the past in the present i...
One of the most important methodological advances in the archaeology of the past quarter century is ...
Historical GIS is an emerging field that uses Geographical Information Systems (GIS) to research the...
To come to well-grounded conclusions, spatial, semantic and administrative data need to be handled s...
Being human embodies understandings of space and spatial relationships which are embedded within the...
Even just a decade ago having a chapter dedicated to Geographical Information Systems (GIS) in a boo...
Geographic Information Systems (CIS) - computer systems for the manipulation and storage of spatial ...
To a greater or lesser extent, all historians make use of geographical information. This means that ...
While the use of geographic information systems (GIS) has become commonplace within the discipline o...
While a vibrant and growing research literature exists on the value of GIS to archaeology in general...
GIS has become an indispensable tool for archaeologists to organize, explore and analyse spatial dat...
The experiences in the field of the documentation and the information management to preserve archaeo...
Geographical Information Systems (GIS) is a rapidly developing archaeological method which is moving...
The diffusion of the use of Geographical Information Systems in archaeology has considerably increas...
We combine the Historical Spatial Data Infrastructure (HSDI) concept developed within spatial histor...
Postindustrial urban landscapes are large-scale, complex manifestations of the past in the present i...
One of the most important methodological advances in the archaeology of the past quarter century is ...
Historical GIS is an emerging field that uses Geographical Information Systems (GIS) to research the...
To come to well-grounded conclusions, spatial, semantic and administrative data need to be handled s...
Being human embodies understandings of space and spatial relationships which are embedded within the...
Even just a decade ago having a chapter dedicated to Geographical Information Systems (GIS) in a boo...
Geographic Information Systems (CIS) - computer systems for the manipulation and storage of spatial ...
To a greater or lesser extent, all historians make use of geographical information. This means that ...