Analysis and interpretation of geophysical surveys in archaeological sites employing different integrated approach
Abstract
Data di Pubblicazione:
2017
Abstract:
Non-destructive ground surface geophysical prospecting methods are frequently used for the investigation of
archaeological sites, where a detailed physical and geometrical reconstructions of hidden volumes is required
prior to any excavation work. All methods measure the variations of single physical parameters, therefore if these
are used singularly, they could not permit a complete location and characterization of anomalous bodies.
The probability of a successful result rapidly increases if a multhimethodological approach is adopted, according
to the logic of objective complementarity of information and of global convergence toward a high quality
multiparametric imaging of the buried structures. The representation of the static configuration of the bodies in
the subsoil and of the space-time evolution of the interaction processes between targets and hosting materials have
to be actually considered fundamental elements of primary knowledge in archaeological prospecting.
The main effort in geophysical prospecting for archaeology is therefore the integration of different, absolutely
non-invasive techniques, especially if managed in view of a ultra-high resolution three-dimensional (3D) tomographic
representation mode.
Following the above outlined approach, we have integrated geophysical methods which measure the variations of
potential field (gradiometric methods) with active methods which measure the variations of physical properties
due to the body's geometry and volume (GPR and ERT).
In this work, the results obtained during the surveys of three archaeological sites, employing Ground Penetrating
Radar (GPR), Electrical Resistivity Tomography (ERT) and Fluxgate Differential Magnetic (FDM) to obtain
precise and detailed maps of subsurface bodies, are presented and discussed. The first site, situated in a suburban
area between Itri and Fondi, in the Aurunci Natural Regional Park (Central Italy), is characterized by the presence
of remains of past human activity dating from the third century B.C. The second site is always in suburban area
and is part of the ancient acropolis Etruscan town of Cerveteri (central Italy). The third site is part of Aizanoi
archaeological park (Cavdarhisar, Kutahya, Turkey).
To have a better understanding of the subsurface, we performed a different integrated approaches of these
data, which consists in fusing the data from all the employed methods, to have a complete visualization of the
investigated area.
For the processing we have used the following techniques: graphical integration (overlay and RGB colour
composite), discrete data analysis (binary data analysis and cluster analysis) and continuous data analysis (data
sum, product, max, min and PCA).
Tipologia CRIS:
04.02 Abstract in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
Integrated geophysical survey; archaeological sites; qualitative and quantitative integrations
Elenco autori:
Zamuner, Daniela; Papale, Enrico; Piro, Salvatore
Link alla scheda completa:
Titolo del libro:
Proceedings of EGU General Assembly 2017
Pubblicato in: