1. Digital Terrain Analysis Reveals New Insights into the Topographic Context of Australian Aboriginal Stone Arrangements
- Author
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W. Boone Law, Megan Lewis, Michael Slack, and Bertram Ostendorf
- Subjects
Terrain analysis ,010506 paleontology ,Archeology ,History ,Resource (biology) ,060102 archaeology ,Context (archaeology) ,Elevation ,Terrain ,06 humanities and the arts ,01 natural sciences ,Archaeology ,Elevation data ,0601 history and archaeology ,Digital elevation model ,Cartography ,Spatial analysis ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Satellite-derived surface elevation models are an important resource for landscape archaeological studies. Digital elevation data is useful for classifying land features, characterizing terrain morphology, and discriminating the geomorphic context of archaeological phenomena. This paper shows how remotely sensed elevation data obtained from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Advanced Land Observing Satellite was integrated with local land system spatial data to digitally classify the topographic slope position of seven broad land classes. The motivation of our research was to employ an objective method that would allow researchers to geomorphometrically discriminate the topographic context of Aboriginal stone arrangements, an important archaeological site type in the Pilbara region of northwest Australia. The resulting digital terrain model demonstrates that stone arrangement sites are strongly correlated with upper topographic land features, a finding that contradicts previous site recordings and fundamentally changes our understanding of where stone arrangement sites are likely to have been constructed. The outcome of this research provides investigators with a stronger foundation for testing hypotheses and developing archaeological models. To some degree, our results also hint at the possible functions of stone arrangements, which have largely remained enigmatic to researchers.
- Published
- 2017