Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 13

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 13
Geophysical Techniques archaeological monuments and land- scapes. General principlcs of geophysical prospection For the prospection of archaeological sites a great number of different geo- physical techniques and instruments exist, each with their own capabilities and limitations. Most techniques work by detecting a contrast in the material prop- erties of the subsurface, producing a geo- physical anomaly. On an archaeological site each method can have different potential depending on the nature of the buried archaeology, geology and possibly climate and land-use. Following data-collection it is then necessary to determine the causative body, and to interpret this as an archaeo- logical feature (Horsley 1998, 17). Geophysical surveys suffer from an inherent ambiguity in the conclusions that can be drawn, as many dififerent sub- surface configurations could reproduce the same observed measurements (Kearey and Brooks 1984, 8-9). It is often the case that processing is required to aid in the identification and interpreta- tion of anomalies in a survey, but altering the raw data in any way must be under- taken with care. Much has been written about the differ- ent geophysical techniques routinely employed in archaeological surveying, in particular the two methods employed for this evaluation: fluxgate gradiometry and earth resistance methods (see Clark, 1975; 1990; Keary & Brooks, 1984; Scollar et al., 1990, Telford et al. 1976, among others). A full background to the techniques and theoretical details will not be given here, and the reader is advised to look at these works, and to the guide- lines for the use of geophysical tech- niques in archaeological field evaluations provided by David (1995) and Gaffney et al. (1991). Archaeological prospection in Iceland In recent years, Fornleifastofnun Islands (FSI) has undertaken an interdisciplinary investigation of the settlement of Iceland, including topographical surveys of extant earthworks, chemical surveys and exca- vation (Friðriksson & Vésteinsson, 1998a, 1998b). However, geophysical prospection as an additional technique for site location and interpretation has never been systematically applied in Iceland, either on its own or as part of an integrated strategy. Archaeological features are not always represented on the surface, but even where earthworks do exist, their morphologies may appear ubiquitous and defy attempts at qualification or charac- terisation (Dockrill and Gater, 1992). Geophysical surveys would be an effec- tive and unique tool in aiding this multi- disciplinary research in Iceland, in the non-destructive characterisation and interpretation of archaeological sites identified by other methods, or in locat- ing new sites in its own right. Before this can happen however, a proper and systematic assessment of the techniques in this new environment is necessary to allow an understanding of 11
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