Archaeological aerial thermography: a case study at the Chaco-era Blue J community, New Mexico

Jesse Casana, John Kantner, Adam Wiewel, Jackson Cothren

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Despite a long history of studies that demonstrate the potential of aerial thermography to reveal surface and subsurface cultural features, technological and cost barriers have prevented the widespread application of thermal imaging in archaeology. This paper presents a method for collection of high-resolution thermal imagery using an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), as well as a means to efficiently process and orthorectify imagery using photogrammetric software. To test the method, aerial surveys were conducted at the Chaco-period Blue J community in northwestern New Mexico. Results enable the size and organization of most habitation sites to be readily mapped, and also reveal previously undocumented architectural features. Our easily replicable methodology produces data that rivals traditional archaeological geophysics in terms of feature visibility, but which can be collected very rapidly, over large areas, with minimal cost and processing requirements.
Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)207-219
JournalJournal of Archaeological Science
Volume45
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2014

Keywords

  • Ancestral Puebloans
  • Archaeo-geophysics
  • LWIR
  • Photogrammetry
  • Thermal imaging
  • UAV

Disciplines

  • Archaeological Anthropology

Cite this