Archaeologia Adriatica, Vol. 8 No. 1, 2014.
Pregledni rad
Using Remote Sensing to Provide Archaeological Findings about Several Sites along the Eastern Adriatic Archipelago and Coast
Željko Tomičić
orcid.org/0000-0002-6780-1887
Sažetak
Archaeology and its various branches (Prehistoric, Classical Antiquity, Mediaeval, Modern Era), as a part of the humanities, is a truly interdisciplinary science. Each of its dimensions is oriented towards the ways in which people have occupied spaces for thousands of years and the various forms of organisation this has taken. It can be said that archaeology operates in three dimensions. Apart from terrestrial archaeology, i.e. the usual field work, there is underwater archaeology (seas, lakes, watercourses) and also archaeology based on facts acquired from remote sensing, i.e. photos from space and the air. This paper focuses on this third dimension of archaeology, presenting examples of archaeological sites from the north of the Croatian archipelago, starting with Krk and continuing along the eastern Adriatic, including its hinterland, down to Pelješac (Ston).
Ključne riječi
Croatia; eastern Adriatic coast; remote sensing; satellite image; aerial photos taken from aircraft; archaeological sites; Late Antiquity; Early and High Middle Ages; Modern Era
Hrčak ID:
171645
URI
Datum izdavanja:
28.1.2015.
Posjeta: 2.930 *