FARM WORKS ASSISTS SURVEY EXPLORATION IN ANCIENT TURKEYBy Nicholas Rauh and Larry Theller
Every
This
field season, in addition, essential
records such as locations of digital photographs and video clips will also
be recorded and exported to a GIS using the Scouting program. Through the
winter of 2000 the authors brought together satellite images, terrain maps,
and surveyed location data to create a geographic information system (GIS)
for the entire survey area. This GIS will be the heart of this years field
operations, and in essence, the Farm Site Mate program will furnish the
central nervous system to the team’s field operations in this difficult,
high-altitude terrain. Previously mapped artifacts can now be quickly located
in the rough underbrush using Site Mate’s ability to load multiple shapefiles
as background, and navigate to those features. Trying to index 300 pottery
sherds, for example, as hand-entered waypoints would quickly surpass the
capacity of the low-cost handheld GPS units being employed by the students,
and the inevitable mis-entered waypoints would consume precious time to
identify. Loading a shapefile that has already been prioritized in a GIS
is a vast improvement. Directed
by Professor Nicholas
Rauh of Purdue University, and funded by the National Science Foundation,
the American Research Institute in Turkey, and participating universities,
the 25 student and Ph.D participants of Rough Cilicia Archaeological
Survey Project have been authorized
by the Turkish Ministry of Culture to explore the archaeological remains
of this vast, rugged, and largely unexplored region. Ranging systematically
across the landscape, team members collect and record surface data obtained
primarily from shattered remains of pottery, architecture, and land-use
terracing as these are encountered in the terrain. During the past five
seasons the survey team has explored more than 150 square kilometers of
Cilician countryside. Apart from mapping the remains of several important
urban sites, such as Selinus and Antioch on the Kragos, team members have
identified more than sixty previously unknown Greco-Roman villages, hamlets,
farm households, tombs, and various other areas of past human activity,
including pottery kilns and wine and olive oil production centers.
where two ancient urban sites (Lamos and Asar Tepe) were previously identified,
and discovered with four new sites (Govan, Tomak, Gocuk, and the fortifications
atop Bozkaya). At Gocuk, they encountered dense sherd scatters, a rock-cut
tomb, a ruined bath complex, and an inscribed statue base that identifies
the ancient settlement as the “lost” Roman colony of Juliosebaste (the subject
of the team’s first on-line publication—see below). To
collect data during the 2001 season the team
will employ Farm Works Site Mate program with 4 sets of hand-held computers attached to hand-held
GPS units. The Site Mate program and the low-cost GPS units will enable team members to assign spatial
locations and descriptive attributes to architectural and ceramics remains as these are encountered
in the field, and to export collected data as shapefiles that can quickly be mapped in the GIS stored
in the project PC at team headquarters. To insure the highest possible degree of accuracy, team
members will tie their survey paths (located with the hand-held GPS devices) to points at Sokkia
Locus III differential GPS units (furnished by Hickerson Instruments Co. of Indianapolis IN) that
remain stationery in the field throughout the day |