Abstract
During the First World War, ancient siege techniques were used in an attempt to break through the stalemate in the trenches. This paper approaches the mine crater war from a completely new perspective and focuses on a landscape-scale approach rather than on fragmented individual sites. Thousands of contemporary aerial photographs have been used as a primary source of information to detect and understand the historical mine crater landscape along the former Western Front in Belgium. The paper presents a methodology for dating war features by means of a time series analysis of aerial photographs, confronting this historical landscape with a high-resolution Airborne Laser Scanning (ALS) dataset.
Originalsprog | Engelsk |
---|---|
Tidsskrift | Applied Geography |
Vol/bind | 66 |
Sider (fra-til) | 64-72 |
Antal sider | 9 |
ISSN | 0143-6228 |
DOI | |
Status | Udgivet - 2016 |
Udgivet eksternt | Ja |
Emneord
- Historical aerial photography
- Conflict archaeology
- Siege warfare
- Airborne laser scanning
- Mine craters
- Air photography interpretation
- ARCHAEOLOGY
- FLANDERS
- WAR
- BELGIUM
- MODELS
- LIDAR