The Kotroni Archaeological Research Project (KASP): evaluating ancient Aphidna using multimodal landscape analysis

A. Agapiou, A. Dakouri-Hild, S. Davis, Eleni Andrikou, William Rourk
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Abstract

The Kotroni Archaeological Research Project (KASP) seeks to understand the relationship between the natural and human landscape of Aphidna from prehistory through to the present, and how such rural communities contributed to the economic, social and cultural life of larger, ‘core’ centres in the region. As one of the constitutional demes of Classical Athens, Aphidna was steeped in the foundational history of the Athenian polis, which saw in it a primordial, ancestral place tied to myths and legends. It accommodated a Middle Bronze Age cemetery, a Mycenaean/Late Bronze Age citadel, a Classical-Hellenistic fort on the citadel, and a Geometric, Archaic, Hellenistic, and Roman settlement. Furthermore, it was later settled in the form of Byzantine and Frankish monastery estates, Turkish chifliks, Arvanite villages, and the contemporary community of nearby Kapandriti. Being that the area of interest (AOI) is both remarkably well preserved due to construction prohibitions necessitated by the nearby Marathon water reservoir and features a diverse history spanning four millennia, it is an excellent case-study for human landscape inquiry, i.e. understanding diachronic inhabitation and the changing meanings of landscape in the longue durée. Important tasks in this direction include clarifying the spatial extent, chronological framework, and nature of settlement as well as the environmental affordances of the landscape, the combination of which permits a thick description of its cultural history. The main method for this investigation is intensive pedestrian survey. Additional conventional methods include the study of ground historical photographs, conventional maps, older field reports, published scholarship, ancient literature and inscription corpora, traveller accounts (17th-19th century AD), in situ buildings or architectural membra dispersed in the landscape, and artefacts (both those collected during the survey and legacy finds in museum storage, e.g. the National Archaeological Museum). Science-based methods consist of geophysical prospection, geological/geomorphological study, optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) analysis, as well as geospatial informatics focusing on satellite and aerial imagery and Lidar-derived digital terrain models. The results of the intensive survey, the geophysical prospection, and the geological/geomorphological and OSL study are presented elsewhere. In this paper we present the outcomes of remote sensing, arguing that the relevant tools play an important role in the study of human landscapes at all stages of archaeological inquiry (prior, during and after ground truthing), especially when revisiting underexplored areas and employing a multimodal ‘third-wave’ survey methodology. The latter weaves in a multitude of analyses, both conventional and digital, and integrates old and new data.
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Kotroni考古研究项目(KASP):利用多模态景观分析评价古代蚜虫
Kotroni考古研究项目(KASP)旨在了解从史前到现在Aphidna自然景观和人文景观之间的关系,以及这些农村社区如何为该地区更大的“核心”中心的经济、社会和文化生活做出贡献。作为古典雅典的宪法女神之一,阿菲德娜沉浸在雅典城邦的基础历史中,在它身上看到了一个与神话和传说联系在一起的原始,祖先的地方。它容纳了一个青铜时代中期的墓地,迈锡尼/青铜时代晚期的城堡,城堡上的古典希腊化堡垒,以及一个几何,古代,希腊化和罗马的定居点。此外,它后来以拜占庭和法兰克修道院庄园,土耳其chifliks, Arvanite村庄和附近Kapandriti的当代社区的形式定居。由于附近马拉松水库的建设禁令,AOI保存得非常完好,并且具有跨越四千年的多样化历史,它是人类景观研究的一个很好的案例,即理解历时性居住和景观在长时间内的变化意义。在这个方向上的重要任务包括澄清空间范围、时间框架、聚落的性质以及景观的环境特征,这些结合起来可以对其文化历史进行详细的描述。调查的主要方法是密集的行人调查。其他传统方法包括研究地面历史照片、传统地图、较旧的实地报告、出版的学术研究、古代文献和铭文语库、旅行者记录(公元17 -19世纪)、分散在景观中的原地建筑或建筑遗迹,以及人工制品(调查期间收集的和博物馆储存的遗产,如国家考古博物馆)。以科学为基础的方法包括地球物理勘探、地质/地貌研究、光激发发光(OSL)分析,以及以卫星和航空图像和激光雷达衍生的数字地形模型为重点的地理空间信息学。密集调查、地球物理勘探、地质/地貌和OSL研究的结果在其他地方介绍。在本文中,我们介绍了遥感的结果,认为相关工具在考古调查的各个阶段(地面真相之前,期间和之后)的人类景观研究中发挥着重要作用,特别是在重新访问未开发地区和采用多模式“第三波”调查方法时。后者结合了大量的分析,包括传统的和数字的,并整合了旧的和新的数据。
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