{"title":"考古遥感的当前发展:中欧的经验与评价","authors":"M. Gojda, Poland Warszawa","doi":"10.24916/iansa.2019.2.5","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article offers thoughts on how current trends are changing the traditional objective of aerial prospection – prehistoric and ancient sites detection and the photographic record – into a more complex aim, namely, the integration of a variety of modern digitally-based, remote-sensing techniques applicable to archaeology into a process that focuses on the study of diachronic developments and synchronic patterns of past settlements. The author presents an evaluation of the current position of remote sensing in the study of the past, mainly from a central European (Czech) perspective, based on his long-term involvement in air survey and landscape archaeology in the Czech Republic. IANSA 2019 ● X/2 ● 155–164 Martin Gojda: Current Development in Archaeological Remote Sensing: A Central European Experience and Evaluation 156 generally allows us to reflect on its complexity. This is true at least when looking at such an intricate component of the world like the Earth’s surface. Its infinitely long evolution has been continually influenced by natural (geologic, climatic, biological) processes, and which human impact has then transformed from what used to be entirely natural into a cultural landscape. These processes have shaped the surface of the Earth and continuously transformed its seemingly stable and unchanging character. The role of archaeology in contemporary Europe has shifted from the more traditional stress on investigation through the excavation of individual sites potentially rich in artefacts/structures/features towards the identification, documentation, mapping and protection of archaeological landscapes for both research objectives and public interest. This orientation corresponds well to the “landscape stream”, one of the most fascinating phenomena, that has attracted recent populations, at least on a European scale. Several works summarising the academic approaches to landscape, and defining the principles of landscape archaeology, have been published since the beginning of this century (e.g., Doneus, 2013, pp.29–38; Fairclough, Møller, eds., 2008; Gojda, 2007; Darvill, Gojda, eds., 2001). This archaeological practice has been more common in Western European countries, but thanks to the increasing number of pan-European projects operating in EU schemes, and due to a certain number of large-scale, state-funded, national research projects in some post-communist countries, it has recently been spreading over this part of Europe as well. Consequently it is non-invasive methods of archaeological research which, since the turn of the 21st century, have taken over the main role in theoretically-motivated (research) projects based on data collected from sites that are not endangered by development. This was explicitly proclaimed as a postulate in the early 1990s when the priority of non-invasive methods was stressed as a point of archaeological ethics at the Valetta Convention for the Protection of the Archaeological Heritage of Europe. Nevertheless, despite the global trends indicating a dominance of non-invasive prospection and field techniques, it is excavation that has maintained its position as the most frequently-applied archaeological method in the heart of Europe, primarily as a legally-supported response to permanent construction activities that have been continuously threatening archaeological heritage since 1990 on a vast scale. Concerning non-invasive methods, ARS, from a historical perspective, is probably the most important. It ranks among the limited number of techniques that have made a contribution to the study and understanding of ancient and historical (medieval, post-medieval, industrial, early modern) periods of the human past. The importance of ARS integration into the study of settlement processes has been compared, for instance, to the invention of the telescope for the study of outer space. Among the methods for gathering/processing/interpreting archaeological data, RS is of high significance and is equal to radiocarbon dating, digital databases, DNA analysis and GIS. At the end of the 1960s and the early 1970s, Leo Deuel, writing about aerial archaeology in his famous book Flights into Yesterday, claimed that “...no other technical advance in archaeology has come so close to fulfilling the goal of recovering intricate cultural contexts, of glimpsing whole prehistoric landscapes, and of capturing a fabric of human existence through the flux of time” (Deuel, 1973, p.26). 2.2 The 1990s – 2000s turnaround: from aerial archaeology to archaeological remote sensing Recent technological development has influenced several archaeological branches, and it is clear that ARS has profited greatly from modern technology: the innovative instruments, devices and techniques invented and produced during the last three decades. It was precisely in this period that the author established aerial archaeology in Bohemia and pushed for the inclusion of this discipline in Czech archaeology. Starting from 1992/3, the position was set in the traditional Crawfordian way of aerial prospection as developed in the 1920s and as such was recently termed “observer-based/directed reconnaissance/aerial surveying” (Verhoeven, Sevara, 2016), “interpretive” (Šmejda, 2017) and “active-interpretive” (Gojda, 2017). It was based on a visual survey of the Earth’s surface from a small aircraft flying at an elevation of c. 300 metres, taking photographs with three analogue, steady cameras and one video camera, navigating visually with the aid of a set of 1:50,000 paper maps, and then, finally, waiting a week or so to find out how successful the mission was after the set of films were developed and images enlarged in a commercial laboratory. A couple of years later, an innovative process was launched that gradually changed aerial archaeology (also referred to as aerial archaeological prospection/reconnaissance/survey) into archaeological remote sensing – a group of techniques/ methods that produced a variety of remotely-sensed data and helped to process and analyse them by sophisticated (digital) procedures: 1. 1993–1995 – the arrival of GNSS/GPS for civilian use and the declassification of the USA’s CORONA satellite imagery; 2. Second half of the 1990s – digital photography introduced to the global market; concerning aerial prospection it greatly simplified the photography process both on board the aircraft (only one camera needed) and after flights (immediate image processing and large-scale digital applicability); 3. 1999 – the launch of the first satellite system (IKONOS) producing images of very high (sub-metre) spatial resolution (in panchro), extremely important for the central European region with a prevalence of small features (pits and small sunken huts at buried, prehistoric and early medieval, settlements); 4. Around 2005 – free access via Google Earth to continuous (seamless) global orthophoto coverage (in the Czech Republic, the first national map server was launched at the same time, with currently accessible imagery taken in five years between 2003–2017; more details follow in the next section); IANSA 2019 ● X/2 ● 155–164 Martin Gojda: Current Development in Archaeological Remote Sensing: A Central European Experience and Evaluation 157 5. 2005–2010 – the beginning of the massive application of airborne laser scanning (ALS) in European archaeology, perhaps the most revolutionary postSecond World War impact on the effective (fast, precise, 3D, digital,....) detection and mapping of our archaeological landscape heritage (this is absolutely true for at least central Europe where ancient, medieval and post-medieval ruined features are preserved as earthworks almost entirely in woodlands). 6. Late 2000s onward – intensified application of image spectrometry using airand spaceborne, hyperspectral data and experimentation with automated (computersupervised) object (i.e. features of archaeological origin) detection from remotely sensed imagery. There is no doubt that these innovations fundamentally changed the traditional image of aerial archaeology, which before this turnaround was – together with the rare application of early satellite imagery and aerial infrared photography (practiced before the 1990s mostly by American scholars, including in their European projects; Madry, 1987) – the exclusive method connected with the study of the (pre)historic landscape from above. The process relegated (traditional) aerial archaeology to the position of just one of several methods integrated into the archaeological remote-sensing “package”. Nevertheless, it is obvious that the integration of modern (digitally-based) sophisticated techniques of ARS with additional field techniques, historical, cartographic and scientific methods/data has a chance to produce more reliable results in the cognitive process focused on the study of diachronic developments and synchronic structures of the components of past settlements and landscapes. 2.3 The potential of remote sensing for central European/Czech archaeology in the 21st century The cognitive process, which in science/research strives to integrate a discipline’s general level with contemporaneous technological achievements and theoretical concepts (paradigms), is never a linear one or one easy to coordinate. The current position of ARS is somewhat strange in that this was formerly a purely detection method predominantly dependent on the observational, physical and interpretative abilities of trained individuals (commonly termed aerial archaeologists), while during the last few years a fundamental change in the ARS agenda (platform) has occurred – primarily as a consequence of the rapid technological development. Today, the dependence of scholars (such as archaeologists, historical geographers, historical environmentalists/ecologists, etc.) on the aerial reconnaissance specialists’ yearly cropmark “harvest” is decreasing. The ability to work with sophisticated software and digital-image","PeriodicalId":38054,"journal":{"name":"Interdisciplinaria Archaeologica","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2019-12-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Current Development in Archaeological Remote Sensing: A Central European Experience and Evaluation\",\"authors\":\"M. Gojda, Poland Warszawa\",\"doi\":\"10.24916/iansa.2019.2.5\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This article offers thoughts on how current trends are changing the traditional objective of aerial prospection – prehistoric and ancient sites detection and the photographic record – into a more complex aim, namely, the integration of a variety of modern digitally-based, remote-sensing techniques applicable to archaeology into a process that focuses on the study of diachronic developments and synchronic patterns of past settlements. The author presents an evaluation of the current position of remote sensing in the study of the past, mainly from a central European (Czech) perspective, based on his long-term involvement in air survey and landscape archaeology in the Czech Republic. IANSA 2019 ● X/2 ● 155–164 Martin Gojda: Current Development in Archaeological Remote Sensing: A Central European Experience and Evaluation 156 generally allows us to reflect on its complexity. This is true at least when looking at such an intricate component of the world like the Earth’s surface. Its infinitely long evolution has been continually influenced by natural (geologic, climatic, biological) processes, and which human impact has then transformed from what used to be entirely natural into a cultural landscape. These processes have shaped the surface of the Earth and continuously transformed its seemingly stable and unchanging character. The role of archaeology in contemporary Europe has shifted from the more traditional stress on investigation through the excavation of individual sites potentially rich in artefacts/structures/features towards the identification, documentation, mapping and protection of archaeological landscapes for both research objectives and public interest. This orientation corresponds well to the “landscape stream”, one of the most fascinating phenomena, that has attracted recent populations, at least on a European scale. Several works summarising the academic approaches to landscape, and defining the principles of landscape archaeology, have been published since the beginning of this century (e.g., Doneus, 2013, pp.29–38; Fairclough, Møller, eds., 2008; Gojda, 2007; Darvill, Gojda, eds., 2001). This archaeological practice has been more common in Western European countries, but thanks to the increasing number of pan-European projects operating in EU schemes, and due to a certain number of large-scale, state-funded, national research projects in some post-communist countries, it has recently been spreading over this part of Europe as well. Consequently it is non-invasive methods of archaeological research which, since the turn of the 21st century, have taken over the main role in theoretically-motivated (research) projects based on data collected from sites that are not endangered by development. This was explicitly proclaimed as a postulate in the early 1990s when the priority of non-invasive methods was stressed as a point of archaeological ethics at the Valetta Convention for the Protection of the Archaeological Heritage of Europe. Nevertheless, despite the global trends indicating a dominance of non-invasive prospection and field techniques, it is excavation that has maintained its position as the most frequently-applied archaeological method in the heart of Europe, primarily as a legally-supported response to permanent construction activities that have been continuously threatening archaeological heritage since 1990 on a vast scale. Concerning non-invasive methods, ARS, from a historical perspective, is probably the most important. It ranks among the limited number of techniques that have made a contribution to the study and understanding of ancient and historical (medieval, post-medieval, industrial, early modern) periods of the human past. The importance of ARS integration into the study of settlement processes has been compared, for instance, to the invention of the telescope for the study of outer space. Among the methods for gathering/processing/interpreting archaeological data, RS is of high significance and is equal to radiocarbon dating, digital databases, DNA analysis and GIS. At the end of the 1960s and the early 1970s, Leo Deuel, writing about aerial archaeology in his famous book Flights into Yesterday, claimed that “...no other technical advance in archaeology has come so close to fulfilling the goal of recovering intricate cultural contexts, of glimpsing whole prehistoric landscapes, and of capturing a fabric of human existence through the flux of time” (Deuel, 1973, p.26). 2.2 The 1990s – 2000s turnaround: from aerial archaeology to archaeological remote sensing Recent technological development has influenced several archaeological branches, and it is clear that ARS has profited greatly from modern technology: the innovative instruments, devices and techniques invented and produced during the last three decades. It was precisely in this period that the author established aerial archaeology in Bohemia and pushed for the inclusion of this discipline in Czech archaeology. Starting from 1992/3, the position was set in the traditional Crawfordian way of aerial prospection as developed in the 1920s and as such was recently termed “observer-based/directed reconnaissance/aerial surveying” (Verhoeven, Sevara, 2016), “interpretive” (Šmejda, 2017) and “active-interpretive” (Gojda, 2017). It was based on a visual survey of the Earth’s surface from a small aircraft flying at an elevation of c. 300 metres, taking photographs with three analogue, steady cameras and one video camera, navigating visually with the aid of a set of 1:50,000 paper maps, and then, finally, waiting a week or so to find out how successful the mission was after the set of films were developed and images enlarged in a commercial laboratory. A couple of years later, an innovative process was launched that gradually changed aerial archaeology (also referred to as aerial archaeological prospection/reconnaissance/survey) into archaeological remote sensing – a group of techniques/ methods that produced a variety of remotely-sensed data and helped to process and analyse them by sophisticated (digital) procedures: 1. 1993–1995 – the arrival of GNSS/GPS for civilian use and the declassification of the USA’s CORONA satellite imagery; 2. Second half of the 1990s – digital photography introduced to the global market; concerning aerial prospection it greatly simplified the photography process both on board the aircraft (only one camera needed) and after flights (immediate image processing and large-scale digital applicability); 3. 1999 – the launch of the first satellite system (IKONOS) producing images of very high (sub-metre) spatial resolution (in panchro), extremely important for the central European region with a prevalence of small features (pits and small sunken huts at buried, prehistoric and early medieval, settlements); 4. Around 2005 – free access via Google Earth to continuous (seamless) global orthophoto coverage (in the Czech Republic, the first national map server was launched at the same time, with currently accessible imagery taken in five years between 2003–2017; more details follow in the next section); IANSA 2019 ● X/2 ● 155–164 Martin Gojda: Current Development in Archaeological Remote Sensing: A Central European Experience and Evaluation 157 5. 2005–2010 – the beginning of the massive application of airborne laser scanning (ALS) in European archaeology, perhaps the most revolutionary postSecond World War impact on the effective (fast, precise, 3D, digital,....) detection and mapping of our archaeological landscape heritage (this is absolutely true for at least central Europe where ancient, medieval and post-medieval ruined features are preserved as earthworks almost entirely in woodlands). 6. Late 2000s onward – intensified application of image spectrometry using airand spaceborne, hyperspectral data and experimentation with automated (computersupervised) object (i.e. features of archaeological origin) detection from remotely sensed imagery. There is no doubt that these innovations fundamentally changed the traditional image of aerial archaeology, which before this turnaround was – together with the rare application of early satellite imagery and aerial infrared photography (practiced before the 1990s mostly by American scholars, including in their European projects; Madry, 1987) – the exclusive method connected with the study of the (pre)historic landscape from above. The process relegated (traditional) aerial archaeology to the position of just one of several methods integrated into the archaeological remote-sensing “package”. Nevertheless, it is obvious that the integration of modern (digitally-based) sophisticated techniques of ARS with additional field techniques, historical, cartographic and scientific methods/data has a chance to produce more reliable results in the cognitive process focused on the study of diachronic developments and synchronic structures of the components of past settlements and landscapes. 2.3 The potential of remote sensing for central European/Czech archaeology in the 21st century The cognitive process, which in science/research strives to integrate a discipline’s general level with contemporaneous technological achievements and theoretical concepts (paradigms), is never a linear one or one easy to coordinate. The current position of ARS is somewhat strange in that this was formerly a purely detection method predominantly dependent on the observational, physical and interpretative abilities of trained individuals (commonly termed aerial archaeologists), while during the last few years a fundamental change in the ARS agenda (platform) has occurred – primarily as a consequence of the rapid technological development. Today, the dependence of scholars (such as archaeologists, historical geographers, historical environmentalists/ecologists, etc.) on the aerial reconnaissance specialists’ yearly cropmark “harvest” is decreasing. 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引用次数: 3
摘要
本文提供了一些关于当前趋势如何将传统的航空勘探目标——史前和古代遗址探测和摄影记录——转变为更复杂的目标的想法,即将各种适用于考古学的现代数字化遥感技术整合到一个专注于研究过去定居点的历时发展和共时模式的过程中。作者主要从中欧(捷克)的角度,根据他长期参与捷克共和国的空中调查和景观考古工作,对遥感在过去研究中的当前地位进行了评价。IANSA 2019●X/2●155-164 Martin Gojda:考古遥感的当前发展:中欧经验和评估156一般让我们反思其复杂性。至少在观察地球表面这样一个复杂的组成部分时,这是正确的。它无限漫长的演变一直受到自然(地质、气候、生物)过程的不断影响,而人类的影响又使它从过去完全自然的地方变成了文化景观。这些过程塑造了地球的表面,并不断地改变着它看似稳定不变的特性。在当代欧洲,考古学的角色已经从传统上强调通过挖掘可能富含人工制品/结构/特征的个别遗址进行调查,转向为研究目标和公众利益而识别、记录、绘制和保护考古景观。这种方向与“景观流”非常吻合,这是最迷人的现象之一,吸引了最近的人口,至少在欧洲范围内是这样。自本世纪初以来,已经出版了几部总结景观学术方法并定义景观考古学原则的作品(例如,Doneus, 2013, pp.29-38;费尔克劳,m . ller,编。, 2008;Gojda, 2007;达维尔,戈伊达,编。, 2001)。这种考古实践在西欧国家更为普遍,但由于越来越多的泛欧项目在欧盟计划中运作,以及由于一些后共产主义国家中有一定数量的大型,国家资助的国家研究项目,它最近也在欧洲的这一部分蔓延开来。因此,自21世纪以来,它是非侵入性的考古研究方法,在基于从未受开发威胁的遗址收集的数据的理论动机(研究)项目中占据了主要地位。20世纪90年代初,在《保护欧洲考古遗产瓦莱塔公约》(Valetta Convention for the Protection of archaeological Heritage)中,非侵入性方法的优先地位被强调为考古伦理的一个要点,这一点被明确地宣布为一项假设。然而,尽管全球趋势表明非侵入性勘探和实地技术占主导地位,但在欧洲中心地区,挖掘仍然是最常用的考古方法,主要是作为对自1990年以来不断大规模威胁考古遗产的永久性建筑活动的法律支持。关于非侵入性方法,从历史的角度来看,ARS可能是最重要的。它是为数不多的对研究和理解人类过去的古代和历史(中世纪、后中世纪、工业、早期现代)时期做出贡献的技术之一。例如,人们将ARS纳入沉降过程研究的重要性与用于研究外层空间的望远镜的发明相提并论。在收集/处理/解释考古数据的方法中,RS具有很高的意义,与放射性碳测年、数字数据库、DNA分析和GIS齐名。在20世纪60年代末和70年代初,利奥·迪尔(Leo Deuel)在他的名著《飞向昨天》(Flights into Yesterday)中谈到了空中考古,他声称“……考古学中没有任何其他技术进步能如此接近于实现恢复复杂的文化背景、瞥见整个史前景观和通过时间的流逝捕捉人类存在的结构的目标”(Deuel, 1973,第26页)。2.2 1990年代至2000年代的转变:从航空考古到考古遥感最近的技术发展影响了几个考古分支,很明显,考古研究所从现代技术中获益良多:在过去三十年中发明和生产的创新仪器、装置和技术。正是在这一时期,作者在波希米亚建立了空中考古学,并推动将这一学科纳入捷克考古学。 能够使用复杂的软件和数字图像
Current Development in Archaeological Remote Sensing: A Central European Experience and Evaluation
This article offers thoughts on how current trends are changing the traditional objective of aerial prospection – prehistoric and ancient sites detection and the photographic record – into a more complex aim, namely, the integration of a variety of modern digitally-based, remote-sensing techniques applicable to archaeology into a process that focuses on the study of diachronic developments and synchronic patterns of past settlements. The author presents an evaluation of the current position of remote sensing in the study of the past, mainly from a central European (Czech) perspective, based on his long-term involvement in air survey and landscape archaeology in the Czech Republic. IANSA 2019 ● X/2 ● 155–164 Martin Gojda: Current Development in Archaeological Remote Sensing: A Central European Experience and Evaluation 156 generally allows us to reflect on its complexity. This is true at least when looking at such an intricate component of the world like the Earth’s surface. Its infinitely long evolution has been continually influenced by natural (geologic, climatic, biological) processes, and which human impact has then transformed from what used to be entirely natural into a cultural landscape. These processes have shaped the surface of the Earth and continuously transformed its seemingly stable and unchanging character. The role of archaeology in contemporary Europe has shifted from the more traditional stress on investigation through the excavation of individual sites potentially rich in artefacts/structures/features towards the identification, documentation, mapping and protection of archaeological landscapes for both research objectives and public interest. This orientation corresponds well to the “landscape stream”, one of the most fascinating phenomena, that has attracted recent populations, at least on a European scale. Several works summarising the academic approaches to landscape, and defining the principles of landscape archaeology, have been published since the beginning of this century (e.g., Doneus, 2013, pp.29–38; Fairclough, Møller, eds., 2008; Gojda, 2007; Darvill, Gojda, eds., 2001). This archaeological practice has been more common in Western European countries, but thanks to the increasing number of pan-European projects operating in EU schemes, and due to a certain number of large-scale, state-funded, national research projects in some post-communist countries, it has recently been spreading over this part of Europe as well. Consequently it is non-invasive methods of archaeological research which, since the turn of the 21st century, have taken over the main role in theoretically-motivated (research) projects based on data collected from sites that are not endangered by development. This was explicitly proclaimed as a postulate in the early 1990s when the priority of non-invasive methods was stressed as a point of archaeological ethics at the Valetta Convention for the Protection of the Archaeological Heritage of Europe. Nevertheless, despite the global trends indicating a dominance of non-invasive prospection and field techniques, it is excavation that has maintained its position as the most frequently-applied archaeological method in the heart of Europe, primarily as a legally-supported response to permanent construction activities that have been continuously threatening archaeological heritage since 1990 on a vast scale. Concerning non-invasive methods, ARS, from a historical perspective, is probably the most important. It ranks among the limited number of techniques that have made a contribution to the study and understanding of ancient and historical (medieval, post-medieval, industrial, early modern) periods of the human past. The importance of ARS integration into the study of settlement processes has been compared, for instance, to the invention of the telescope for the study of outer space. Among the methods for gathering/processing/interpreting archaeological data, RS is of high significance and is equal to radiocarbon dating, digital databases, DNA analysis and GIS. At the end of the 1960s and the early 1970s, Leo Deuel, writing about aerial archaeology in his famous book Flights into Yesterday, claimed that “...no other technical advance in archaeology has come so close to fulfilling the goal of recovering intricate cultural contexts, of glimpsing whole prehistoric landscapes, and of capturing a fabric of human existence through the flux of time” (Deuel, 1973, p.26). 2.2 The 1990s – 2000s turnaround: from aerial archaeology to archaeological remote sensing Recent technological development has influenced several archaeological branches, and it is clear that ARS has profited greatly from modern technology: the innovative instruments, devices and techniques invented and produced during the last three decades. It was precisely in this period that the author established aerial archaeology in Bohemia and pushed for the inclusion of this discipline in Czech archaeology. Starting from 1992/3, the position was set in the traditional Crawfordian way of aerial prospection as developed in the 1920s and as such was recently termed “observer-based/directed reconnaissance/aerial surveying” (Verhoeven, Sevara, 2016), “interpretive” (Šmejda, 2017) and “active-interpretive” (Gojda, 2017). It was based on a visual survey of the Earth’s surface from a small aircraft flying at an elevation of c. 300 metres, taking photographs with three analogue, steady cameras and one video camera, navigating visually with the aid of a set of 1:50,000 paper maps, and then, finally, waiting a week or so to find out how successful the mission was after the set of films were developed and images enlarged in a commercial laboratory. A couple of years later, an innovative process was launched that gradually changed aerial archaeology (also referred to as aerial archaeological prospection/reconnaissance/survey) into archaeological remote sensing – a group of techniques/ methods that produced a variety of remotely-sensed data and helped to process and analyse them by sophisticated (digital) procedures: 1. 1993–1995 – the arrival of GNSS/GPS for civilian use and the declassification of the USA’s CORONA satellite imagery; 2. Second half of the 1990s – digital photography introduced to the global market; concerning aerial prospection it greatly simplified the photography process both on board the aircraft (only one camera needed) and after flights (immediate image processing and large-scale digital applicability); 3. 1999 – the launch of the first satellite system (IKONOS) producing images of very high (sub-metre) spatial resolution (in panchro), extremely important for the central European region with a prevalence of small features (pits and small sunken huts at buried, prehistoric and early medieval, settlements); 4. Around 2005 – free access via Google Earth to continuous (seamless) global orthophoto coverage (in the Czech Republic, the first national map server was launched at the same time, with currently accessible imagery taken in five years between 2003–2017; more details follow in the next section); IANSA 2019 ● X/2 ● 155–164 Martin Gojda: Current Development in Archaeological Remote Sensing: A Central European Experience and Evaluation 157 5. 2005–2010 – the beginning of the massive application of airborne laser scanning (ALS) in European archaeology, perhaps the most revolutionary postSecond World War impact on the effective (fast, precise, 3D, digital,....) detection and mapping of our archaeological landscape heritage (this is absolutely true for at least central Europe where ancient, medieval and post-medieval ruined features are preserved as earthworks almost entirely in woodlands). 6. Late 2000s onward – intensified application of image spectrometry using airand spaceborne, hyperspectral data and experimentation with automated (computersupervised) object (i.e. features of archaeological origin) detection from remotely sensed imagery. There is no doubt that these innovations fundamentally changed the traditional image of aerial archaeology, which before this turnaround was – together with the rare application of early satellite imagery and aerial infrared photography (practiced before the 1990s mostly by American scholars, including in their European projects; Madry, 1987) – the exclusive method connected with the study of the (pre)historic landscape from above. The process relegated (traditional) aerial archaeology to the position of just one of several methods integrated into the archaeological remote-sensing “package”. Nevertheless, it is obvious that the integration of modern (digitally-based) sophisticated techniques of ARS with additional field techniques, historical, cartographic and scientific methods/data has a chance to produce more reliable results in the cognitive process focused on the study of diachronic developments and synchronic structures of the components of past settlements and landscapes. 2.3 The potential of remote sensing for central European/Czech archaeology in the 21st century The cognitive process, which in science/research strives to integrate a discipline’s general level with contemporaneous technological achievements and theoretical concepts (paradigms), is never a linear one or one easy to coordinate. The current position of ARS is somewhat strange in that this was formerly a purely detection method predominantly dependent on the observational, physical and interpretative abilities of trained individuals (commonly termed aerial archaeologists), while during the last few years a fundamental change in the ARS agenda (platform) has occurred – primarily as a consequence of the rapid technological development. Today, the dependence of scholars (such as archaeologists, historical geographers, historical environmentalists/ecologists, etc.) on the aerial reconnaissance specialists’ yearly cropmark “harvest” is decreasing. The ability to work with sophisticated software and digital-image