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Seeing past the dirt: using ground-penetrating radar to focus archaeological digs.


Behold the modern archaeologist in the field: no pick, no shovel, no whisk broom. On this day, the only equipment that's apparent is a cart full of electronics, which the researcher is pushing back and forth over the ground. The activity recalls a homeowner mowing a lawn, but this is instead high-tech prospecting with ground-penetrating radar Ground-penetrating radar (GPR) is a geophysical method that uses radar pulses to image the subsurface. This non-destructive method uses electromagnetic radiation in the microwave band (UHF/VHF frequencies) of the radio spectrum, and detects the reflected signals from . A flickering screen on the cart reveals echoes of buried objects, reflections that may represent artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
, structures, or other signs of civilizations long ago.

Mapping out subsurface features with radar enables scientists to focus their excavations more narrowly than they ever could before. No more cursory, wide-ranging digs based on hunches that something interesting might turn up. Besides saving archaeologists a lot of digging, time, and money, ground-penetrating radar permits them to study sites that are considered off-limits to physical disturbances.

Where radar turns up objects worth digging for, archaeologists can apply their shovels precisely and spare landscapes from much of the scarring that less-directed digging brings.

The radar equipment, like most electronics, is growing ever more capable and affordable. Radar reveals buried objects by comparing their density or electrical differences with those of surrounding material. In some eases, it detects fist-size objects a meter into the soil.

As some archaeologists turn to this modern equipment to study sites that date back thousands of years, others are using it to fill in the blank pages of more-recent history. By studying a World War II battleground, for one, researchers have uncovered previously unrecognized military innovations that the Nazis used during their occupation of France.

SEEK, AND YE SHALL FIND For teasing out the details of everyday life for long-gone peoples, it's often the small artifacts that say the most. Large structures such as Maya buildings or Egyptian pyramids The Pyramids of Egypt are among the largest constructions ever built[1] and constitute one of the most potent and enduring symbols of Ancient Egyptian civilization. Most were built during the Old and Middle Kingdom periods[2]. , though easy to spot and study, don't tell the whole story. Many clues about life at such sites are found at smaller scales, such as within the living quarters, storage sheds, and garbage pits of ancient civilizations.

Typically, the environment has reclaimed small, everyday objects.

They lie buried under a leaf-littered forest floor, a sand dune sand dune

Hill, mound, or ridge of windblown sand or other loose material such as clay particles. Dunes are commonly associated with desert regions and seacoasts, and there are large areas of dunes in nonglacial parts of Antarctica.
, or layers of sediment. With ground-penetrating radar and other so-called geophysical technologies, such as gradiometers that can detect small variations within a magnetic field, researchers can limit their excavations, says Armin Schmidt of the University of Bradford The University of Bradford is a university in Bradford, West Yorkshire in the United Kingdom. History
The university has its origins in the Bradford Schools of Weaving, Design and Building which in 1882 became the Bradford Technical College.
 in England. When digs are less invasive, researchers can leave large portions of a site undisturbed and therefore in their original context, he notes.

Take, for example, the Iron Age site of Muweilah in the United Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates, federation of sheikhdoms (2005 est. pop. 2,563,000), c.30,000 sq mi (77,700 sq km), SE Arabia, on the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman. . The sand-covered site was discovered in 1988, but scientists didn't begin extensive excavations there until 1994. Over the next 7 years, teams of archaeologists primarily from the University of Sydney The University of Sydney, established in Sydney in 1850, is the oldest university in Australia. It is a member of Australia's "Group of Eight" Australian universities that are highly ranked in terms of their research performance.  in Australia excavated the foundation of an approximately 100-square-meter, multiroom structure that probably served as living quarters for members of the community. Researchers also excavated, from beneath about a meter of sand, remnants of a large columned building that may have been the political and economic center of the community, says Ryz Evangelista, a geophysicist who studied the site and now works for the resource-exploration company WMC Resources WMC Resources Limited was an Australian diversified mining and fertilizer company formerly listed on the Australian Stock Exchange. WMC was an acronym for Western Mining Corporation. It was delisted on 29 June 2005 following a successful takeover by BHP Billiton.  in Belmont, Western Australia Coordinates:

Belmont is a suburb of Perth, Western Australia. It is part of the City of Belmont.

    
.

After these big digs, the researchers in 2001 turned to radar to investigate two unexcavated 20-m-by-50-m plots near the uncovered buildings. Tests suggested that the radar could reveal sections of mud-brick walls as much as 5 m down into the sand.

Without turning a shovel, the scientists discovered large structures and small artifacts. In one of the areas, Evangelista and her colleagues took about a month to collect radar data along paths spaced 25 centimeters apart. Across the eastern portion of this plot, about I m beneath the surface, the radar showed two walls made of stones and mud bricks. Those walls probably marked the outer rim of the community, the researchers say. The radar scans also revealed fragments of some other sort of walls near the center of the grid.

Excavation of a single hole just a couple of meters across revealed that one of those walls was made solely of mud bricks, like those of the presumed living quarters previously excavated. A large, horizontal and hard-packed layer that showed up on radar probably denotes the surface of an ancient courtyard. Small radar blips just above the dense layer suggest that the now-buried courtyard may be littered with artifacts, such as fragments of locally produced pottery, or with discarded stones from construction projects, such as the rocks found in the large excavations at Muweilah.

In the second plot, radar scanning detected no walls but revealed a sloping surface of hard-packed sand, possibly another courtyard. One large rectangular object--buried at a depth of about 30 cm, which is well above the level of the courtyard-probably dates from a more-recent era. Because the item might be refuse from a previously undocumented expedition, the researchers haven't yet decided whether to dig down to undermine and cause to fall by digging; as, to dig down a wall.

See also: Dig
 to it.

Without ground-penetrating radar and other geophysical technologies, Evangelista says that it probably would have taken much longer to find areas of possible archaeological interest beneath the sand at the Muweilah site. The techniques obviate ob·vi·ate  
tr.v. ob·vi·at·ed, ob·vi·at·ing, ob·vi·ates
To anticipate and dispose of effectively; render unnecessary. See Synonyms at prevent.
 the need to fully excavate the site to unearth its major features, a process that could take as many as 20 years, she adds.

Radar has proved its worth in the jungle as well. Julie A. Aitken of the University of Calgary in Alberta and her colleagues have used radar carts to probe beneath the forest floor at the ancient Maya site of Maax Na, discovered in Belize in 1995. The site was probably occupied from about 350 B.C to A.D. 300, says Aitken. Large aboveground structures, including stone temples, administrative buildings, and pyramids, surround a 100m-by-150-m plaza, some of which has been thoroughly overgrown overgrown

said of a part that has not been kept trimmed.


overgrown hoof
overgrown hooves put unusual stresses on bones and tendons and allow for distortion of the wall and sole.
 by the jungle.

Early excavations at the plaza revealed several layers of buried stonework stonework, term applied to various types of work—that of the lapidary who shapes, cuts, and polishes gemstones or engraves them for seals and ornaments; of the jeweler or artisan who mounts or encrusts them in gold, silver, or other metal; of the stonemason who , each of which served as a pavement for the open area during a different time of the settlement's history. After proving that radar could detect these features, Aitken in 2004 conducted scans of two other areas of the plaza. The surveys showed blips of various sizes that could represent broken pottery, altars, and caches of ceremonial objects. Archaeologists plan to excavate those areas in future digs, Aitken said in May at the American Geophysical Union The American Geophysical Union (or AGU) is a nonprofit organization of geophysicists, consisting of over 50,000 members from over 140 countries. AGU's activities are focused on the organization and dissemination of scientific information in the interdisciplinary and  meeting in New Orleans New Orleans (ôr`lēənz –lənz, ôrlēnz`), city (2006 pop. 187,525), coextensive with Orleans parish, SE La., between the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain, 107 mi (172 km) by water from the river mouth; founded .

TREADING LIGHTLY In some instances, the nondestructive non·de·struc·tive  
adj.
Of, relating to, or being a process that does not result in damage to the material under investigation or testing.



non
 nature of radar and other geophysical technologies makes archaeology possible at sites that must remain untouched.

Consider the Kolomoki Mounds archaeological site near Blakely, Ga. Many researchers regard that locale as one of the most important in the southeastern United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  of the woodland period, a stage in the cultural evolution of Native Americans of that area from 1000 B.C. to A.D. 900, says Nina Serman of the University of Georgia Organization
The President of the University of Georgia (as of 2007, Michael F. Adams) is the head administrator and is appointed and overseen by the Georgia Board of Regents.
 in Athens. The site once held at least eight large burial mounds and is well known for its exquisite ceramics.

Despite its archaeological importance, the site and its previous occupants aren't well understood. The site was placed on the National Register of Historic Places This article is about the U.S. Register. For the National Register of Historic Places in Canada see Canadian Register of Historic Places.

The National Register of Historic Places
 in 1966, a U.S.-government designation that restricts archaeological excavations. Nevertheless, radar and other techniques that avoid digging are uncovering some of the site's story.

Along a tree line, radar has identified buried features that may be signs of habitation HABITATION, civil law. It was the right of a person to live in the house of another without prejudice to the property.
     2. It differed from a usufruct in this, that the usufructuary might have applied the house to any purpose, as, a store or manufactory; whereas
, including the postholes of long-deteriorated structures and pits that may have been used for holding food, fires, or trash. Within the same area, sensitive gradiometers detected magnetic signs of cooking hearths and pot fragments. Fire baking often changes or eliminates the magnetic field within a material, a characteristic that can distinguish it from surrounding sediments.

Together, these findings suggest that this patch of ground was once a densely populated, permanent settlement, Serman reported at the American Geophysical Union meeting in New Orleans. Her colleagues may perform limited excavations to further investigate the evidence as soon as this fall, she told Science News.

Minimally invasive archaeology can come in handy Verb 1. come in handy - be useful for a certain purpose
be - have the quality of being; (copula, used with an adjective or a predicate noun); "John is rich"; "This is not a good answer"
 in areas typically considered off limits, such as battlefields where countries commemorate fallen soldiers. Some of the most sacred battlegrounds of World War II are those along the beaches of Normandy in France, where Allied forces stormed German fortifications This is a list of fortifications past and present, a fortification being a major physical defensive structure often composed of a more or less wall-connected series of forts.  on D-day, June 6, 1944.

At Pointe du Hoe, on cliffs overlooking two of the D-day beaches, the Germans constructed a forward command post and numerous bunkers, says Mark E. Everett, an archaeologist at Texas A&M University in College Station. Historians haven't found any German documentation that shows exactly what was built at the site, how it was built, or what materials were used. Recollections of the site provided by U.S. and British soldiers during and after the war are sketchy, Everett notes.

"Nobody really knows what's [buried] down there," says Everett. That's why he and his colleagues sought permission from the American Battle Monuments Commission to investigate the site with radar carts, metal detectors, and gradiometers.

Many of the results aren't surprising. Radar has detected fragments of ordnance in some bomb craters as well as the buried remains of a line of machine-gun emplacements and a steel-reinforced concrete trench. However, one of the most enigmatic features at Pointe du Hoe is a cliff-top circle of dead grass that measures 7 m across. It's probably too large to be a gun emplacement Noun 1. gun emplacement - an emplacement for a gun
weapons emplacement

emplacement - military installation consisting of a prepared position for siting a weapon

nest - a kind of gun emplacement; "a machine-gun nest"; "a nest of snipers"
, says Everett. Instruments have indicated long, metallic objects stretching away from the hub of the circle, which has led the researchers to speculate that it marks the buried remains of a railway turntable. Such a turntable could have been the hub of a narrow-gauge railway used to shuttle ammunition, guns, or heavy equipment around the site, says Everett. He presented his team's results at the New Orleans meeting.

The researchers' findings may be used to guide a limited number of future excavations. Moreover, in areas that won't be disturbed by digging, the scanning results could be shared with tour guides who would pass along the site's hidden history to visitors, says Everett.

HOLES IN HISTORY In another example of archaeological techniques revealing World War II history, Lawrence E. Babits of East Carolina University East Carolina University is a public, coeducational, intensive research university located in Greenville, North Carolina, United States. Named East Carolina University by statue and commonly known as ECU or East Carolina  in Greenville, N.C., and his colleagues are exploring the prisoner of war PRISONER OF WAR. One who has been captured while fighting under the banner of some state. He is a prisoner, although never confined in a prison.
     2. In modern times, prisoners are treated with more humanity than formerly; the individual captor has now no
 camp made famous in the 1963 film The Great Escape.

Stalag Luft III Stalag Luft III (Stammlager Luft, or Permanent Camp for Airmen #3) was a German Air Force prisoner-of-war camp during World War II that housed captured air force personnel. It was near Sagan, now Żagań in Poland, 100 miles(160 km) southeast of Berlin.  was built by the Germans during World War II in what is now western Poland. The Nazis thought the prison to be escape-proof, but on the night of March 26, 1944, Allied soldiers proved that notion wrong.

As part of their escape plan, over a period of months, prisoners had dug three tunnels, which they code-named Tom, Dick, and Harry Tom, Dick, and Harry
n. Informal
Anybody at all; a member of the public at large: It's not a smart idea to admit every Tom, Dick, and Harry to the party. 
. Having three tunnels provided a measure of redundancy: If guards discovered one, prisoners could continue digging in the other two. Indeed, guards eventually stumbled upon the entrance to the Tom tunnel, which was located in a darkened dark·en  
v. dark·ened, dark·en·ing, dark·ens

v.tr.
1.
a. To make dark or darker.

b. To give a darker hue to.

2. To fill with sadness; make gloomy.

3.
 corner of one of the camp's buildings. The prisoners rushed to finish another tunnel before it, too, was discovered.

The main constraint on the prisoners' digging rate was how fast they could get rid of dirt removed from the tunnel without being discovered, not by how fast they could dig. Once the Germans discovered Tom, the prisoners decided to excavate only in the Harry tunnel and to use Dick as a disposal site for dirt from that digging, says Babits. Seventy-six men escaped through Harry, although only three made their way through the surrounding hostile territory to freedom.

Although the Germans discovered Harry after the escape, they never found Dick's remains. The Soviet soldiers who occupied the camp after the war in Europe also found no trace of the tunnel, nor did the looters who ransacked ran·sack  
tr.v. ran·sacked, ran·sack·ing, ran·sacks
1. To search or examine thoroughly.

2. To search carefully for plunder; pillage.
 the camp soon after the Soviets left.

In 2003, Babits and his colleagues rediscovered Dick when they applied ground-penetrating radar. Their scans showed the tunnel just where some of the surviving prisoners suggested it might be-about 9 m below ground level and stretching to and beyond the old fence line from a vertical shaft beneath one of the now-demolished huts. Although Dick had been mostly refilled, the disturbed dirt contrasted with the surrounding soil and therefore showed up clearly in the radar echoes.

Babits and his fellow archaeologists subsequently excavated more than 30,000 cubic meters of sand to reach Dick. At tunnel level, the researchers found lamps used during excavations, remains of the powdered-milk cans that prisoners had spliced together to create air ducts, and signs of the wooden beams-formerly bed slats--that had been used to support the ceiling of the tunnel. Although the beams had rotted long ago, the archaeologists could still see discoloration dis·col·or·a·tion  
n.
1.
a. The act of discoloring.

b. The condition of being discolored.

2. A discolored spot, smudge, or area; a stain.

Noun 1.
 that the beams had produced in the soil. The color even revealed where the wood pieces had been notched to fit together.

Another relic found by the archaeologists opens new and unexpected questions about the camp. Current residents of the area long thought that no Poles worked at the camp or aided the prisoners. However, when the 2003 excavations unearthed Unearthed is the name of a Triple J project to find and "dig up" (hence the name) hidden talent in regional Australia.

Unearthed has had three incarnations - they first visited each region of Australia where Triple J had a transmitter - 41 regions in all.
 the trap-door that hid the mouth of the Dick tunnel, it turned out to have been made from crash debris of an aircraft flown by members of the Polish resistance movement. How that material got into the camp and to the tunnel's entrance is, for now, a mystery, says Babits.
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Author:Perkins, Sid
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Cover Story
Date:Jul 30, 2005
Words:2207
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