In practice we are claiming an
average of a settlement for every three square kilometers. A little bit of overkill here as this must
include every farmhouse ever put up. Yet
it also means that an area can be picked through pretty effectively and real anomalies
sorted out without fear that anything has been overlooked.
It is well that this is been
done. In the long term, soil restoration
and hydraulic restoration will bring back soils and environmental health, all
of which will quickly bury this data. In
the meantime we can dig and confirm.
The good news is that human
occupation disturbs the natural soils in these lands and in many others
allowing us to identify it with satellite and aerial work. Here computer methods are sorting them
out. Just having a list starts the long
process of evaluation.
Ancient sites spotted from space, say archaeologists
This mound in Syria
was formed as generations built and rebuilt mud-brick homes on the same spot
20 March 2012 Last updated at 06:45 ET
Thousands of possible early human settlements have been discovered by
archaeologists using computers to scour satellite images.
Jason Ur said he had found about 9,000 potential new sites in
north-eastern Syria .
Computers scanned the images for soil discolouration and mounds caused
when mud-brick settlements collapsed.
Dr Ur said surveying the same area on the ground would have taken him a
lifetime.
Writing
in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researcher told
BBC News: "With these computer science techniques, however, we can
immediately come up with an enormous map which is methodologically very
interesting, but which also shows the staggering amount of human occupation
over the last 7,000 or 8,000 years.
"What's more, anyone who comes back to this area for any future
survey would already know where to go.
"There's no need to do this sort of initial reconnaissance to find
sites. This allows you to do targeted work, so it maximises the time we have on
the ground."
Iraqi heritage sites
In the past, Dr Ur used declassified spy satellite photographs and the
human eye to try to identify potential sites.
But over the last three years, he has worked with computer expert
Bjoern Menze, from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, to create a
software application able to classify a huge range of terrain.
He said this had removed subjectivity and allowed them to look at a
much larger area.
In all, about 9,000 possible settlements were identified across 23,000
sq km.
Ideally, he said, some of these would be excavated, but the volatile
political situation in Syria
had forced them to put any ground searches on hold.
However, he did tell the BBC that he hoped to conduct further research
in the Kurdish provinces of northern Iraq, and follow that up with excavations
that would be "a very rigorous testing of the model".
Archaeological work in Iraq
has not been popular in the past, but Dr Ur feels the time is right to identify
heritage sites of importance and ensure they are not lost as the country presses
on with widespread development of its towns and cities.
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