A continuing theme since the initial adoption of GIS technology by archaeologists has been the modelling of visibility and movement as ways of understanding past landscapes and he people who inhabited them. The underlying issues have been fully explored elsewhere and here we briefly introduce only the main points relevant to the work presented in this paper. Modelling visibility and movement is usually justified through an interest in "perceiving the landscape" and an attempt to move GIS-based analysis away from "detached objectivism" (describing landscape as if viewing from a distance) towards "situated subjectivity" (trying to understand landscape from experiencing it directly)
GIS has become an indispensable tool for archaeologists to organize, explore and analyse spatial dat...
Spatial analysis has traditionally considered settlements in relation to each other and aspects of t...
Interpreting the results of computerised methods in archaeology cannot be done without a reference t...
This paper reviews some of the main theoretical critiques of spatial technological approaches to the...
Visibility analysis has become extremely popular in landscape-oriented archaeology in recent decades...
This paper describes the history and current state of archaeological visibility studies. The first p...
This paper describes the history and current state of archaeological visibility studies. The first p...
The aim of this paper is to extend the range of current analytical procedures that archaeologists us...
Rather than attempt to write a balanced or complete overview of the application of GIS to archaeolog...
This paper reflects on some of the currently unresolved issues in the formal analysis of visibility ...
Our paper will start from exploring briefly the situation of GIS applications in the archaeological ...
Analyses of visibility have become a commonplace within landscape-based archaeological research, whe...
Since the widespread adoption of GIS by archaeologists in the early 1990s, analyses of visibility ha...
International audienceTwo observations based on the use of lidar data to study past landscapes sit a...
Analyses of visibility have become a commonplace within landscape-based archaeological research, whe...
GIS has become an indispensable tool for archaeologists to organize, explore and analyse spatial dat...
Spatial analysis has traditionally considered settlements in relation to each other and aspects of t...
Interpreting the results of computerised methods in archaeology cannot be done without a reference t...
This paper reviews some of the main theoretical critiques of spatial technological approaches to the...
Visibility analysis has become extremely popular in landscape-oriented archaeology in recent decades...
This paper describes the history and current state of archaeological visibility studies. The first p...
This paper describes the history and current state of archaeological visibility studies. The first p...
The aim of this paper is to extend the range of current analytical procedures that archaeologists us...
Rather than attempt to write a balanced or complete overview of the application of GIS to archaeolog...
This paper reflects on some of the currently unresolved issues in the formal analysis of visibility ...
Our paper will start from exploring briefly the situation of GIS applications in the archaeological ...
Analyses of visibility have become a commonplace within landscape-based archaeological research, whe...
Since the widespread adoption of GIS by archaeologists in the early 1990s, analyses of visibility ha...
International audienceTwo observations based on the use of lidar data to study past landscapes sit a...
Analyses of visibility have become a commonplace within landscape-based archaeological research, whe...
GIS has become an indispensable tool for archaeologists to organize, explore and analyse spatial dat...
Spatial analysis has traditionally considered settlements in relation to each other and aspects of t...
Interpreting the results of computerised methods in archaeology cannot be done without a reference t...