Geological Knowledge Entry
Structured scientific knowledge about geological data, references, and research.
Survey and Excavation (Field Methods) in Archaeology
Persistent URL: https://w3id.org/egdi/reference/222
Authors
- M.S. Joukowsky,
How to cite
Abstract
This is a general introduction to the subject, and does not, therefore, deal with many distinct areas or challenges to the discipline. Archaeology is a dynamic discipline in that new research techniques continue to revolutionize its modes of thought and methods, and researchers are asking different questions of the data today from those they asked years ago. On both scientific and theoretical fronts, therefore, the field is developing at a fast pace. In the past few years, archaeology has become a global discipline with many researchers applying the same systems such as Geographic Information Systems (GIS) along with aerial reconnaissance and remote sensing. We begin with ‘archaeology’ as a term, and cover a brief history of the discipline, its importance, types of archaeological sites, fields of archaeological study and dating systems used in the discipline. The focus then changes to survey, excavation and ethical considerations, excavation and the modern developments in the discipline.
Journal Info
Pages: 15306-15311
Metadata
Type: chapter