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Direct detection of Southeast Asian smelting sites by ASTER remote sensing imagery: technical issues and future perspectives
Authors:TO Pryce  MJ Abrams
Institution:1. Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art, University of Oxford, OX1 3QY Oxford, United Kingdom;2. UMR 7055, Laboratoire Préhistoire et Technologie, Université de Paris X, France;3. Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, United States
Abstract:Satellite-based multi-spectral remote sensing data were used in an attempt to identify control signatures for known prehistoric copper smelting sites in Thailand. It had been hoped that these characteristic signals could then be used as a reference for the detection of unknown Southeast Asian metal production sites, with the overall intention of strengthening the evidence base for early technological interactions with China and India. Regrettably, control signatures were not identified from the ASTER data due to issues of scale, chemistry, and vegetation, but we are able to offer reasons for this setback that might lead other scholars to develop successful applications of this methodology in more amenable (non-tropical) environments. Combined with ground truthing, intensive survey, excavation, and the technological analysis of metallurgical assemblages, this potentially useful and cost effective approach could lead to improved data density for the metal technology transmission discussions currently spanning Eurasia.
Keywords:Archaeometallurgy  ASTER  GIS  Remote sensing  Smelting  Thailand
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