Tag: geomatics
How Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) works
ground-penetrating radar (GPR) is a technology NASA created to study moon dust and the military used to find enemy tunnels during the Vietnam war. And in the past few years, it’s revolutionized archaeology. Different materials reflect energy back to the surface in different ways, allowing researchers to “see” each distinctive feature.The radar machine has a [...]
Posted: September 13th, 2009 under digital archaeology, research.
Tags: archaeological computing, digital archaeology, geomatics, geophysics, gpr
Comments: 2
Sub Ground Imaging
free gpr use for academic research
Posted: August 17th, 2009 under digital archaeology, research.
Tags: arcgis, archaeological computing, archaeology, digital archaeology, free, free gpr, geomatics, geophysics, gis, gpr, sub ground imaging
Comments: none
HowTo: Connect to Microsoft Access 2007 (ACCDB) files in ArcGIS
Technical Articles – ESRI Support. sorry to be a bit geeky I was having trouble trying to import my newly upgraded database into ArcGIS 9.2. I was originally using Access 2003 (.mdb) then moved to Access 2007 (.accdb) only to find that the new file extension was not recognised in ESRI ArcView until I found [...]
Posted: January 15th, 2009 under PhD, digital archaeology, research.
Tags: Access, Add new tag, arcgis, archaeological computing, digital archaeology, dissemination, geomatics, gis, research tools
Comments: none
back from the Ukraine
I returned from another geophysics season in Ukraine on the 24th of July. I worked out there with Alex Turner (Soviet Al not the Artic Monkey) doing GPR ( Mala Ground Penetrating Radar) and Magnetometry (Geoscan FM36 Fluxgate Gradiometer). Last year we used a Resistivity machine (Geoscan RM15) and so where able to combine the [...]
Posted: July 26th, 2008 under Ukraine, research.
Tags: akkerman, arcgis, archaeology, geomatics, geophysics, geoscan, gpr, gradiometery, research, resistivity, total staion, Ukraine
Comments: none




