Ever since computer programmer Luca Mori discovered a Roman villa in his hometown using Google Earth, archaeological surveys are becoming more of a telecommuting gig than a through-the-jungle-with-a-machete gig: Satellites build a picture of the past.
American archaeologist Scott Madry, Associate Professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, stumbled across a newspaper covering Mori’s story. Madry had been professionally surveying archaeological sites for more than 25 years, becoming frustrated with the inefficient, dangerous and somewhat inaccurate method of aerial surveying.
Within a few hours on Google Earth, Madry was able to locate 101 features in an area covering 1,440 square kilometres in Central France. These features represented Iron Age, Medieval and Gallo-Roman sites.
Aerial surveying is expensive as hell, too. Not only are planes expensive, but even a single high resolution satellite image can cost thens of thousands of dollars. Google Earth is free.
P.S. – NASA has an archaeologist. Who knew?
What a neat discovery! To think the expense and time this will save for archaeologists all over the world.
Indeed. It makes a lot of discoveries possible that just weren’t before, due to expense or terrain or what have you.