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Aerial Archaeology in Armenia

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  • Aerial Archaeology in Armenia

    http://ancientworldonline.blogspot.com/2012/12/aerial-archaeology-in-armenia.html

    Tuesday, December 18, 2012
    Aerial Archaeology in Armenia
    Wings Over Armenia
    By Charles Jones

    In 2002, ACE and the British Academy funded the launch of Wings over
    Armenia. The project aim is to support Armenian science and the
    introduction and development of aerial archaeology in Armenia. The
    first stage of the project took place in June 2002 when Rog Palmer and
    Hayk Hakobyan conducted ground reconnaissance of an area identified
    for study from the air. The aerial exploration itself was planned to
    take place in late-September and October 2002. At the time, Wings over
    Armenia had virtually no equipment to carry out its intended work.
    Fortunately the project was discovered by the British Council, an
    organization disseminating the United Kingdom's experience and
    creative vision in science, arts and education. The British Council
    Office in Yerevan responded generously to a plea for funding and
    enabled the scientists to acquire a two-person paramotor (powered
    parawing) for aerial exploration.

    Wings over Armenia is a pioneering programme within the states of the
    former Soviet Union. Its first stage will include systematic aerial
    survey and photography of the Kasach gorge area - 400 sq km of
    foothills and plains 20 km northwest of Yerevan. The project area
    includes known sites dating back as far as the Bronze Age, along with
    features such as field systems and road networks that can be
    effectively recorded from the air. Another element of the programme
    will be field visits to possible sites detected on 1970s satellite
    imagery [links to publications in AARGnews and Eurisy], and during the
    project's own aerial survey. Results from Wings over Armenia will thus
    add immediately to the knowledge already known to Armenian
    archaeologists through field investigation and excavation.
    Aerial photographs taken during this first programme of survey will be used to:

    supplement knowledge about known sites;

    record new archaeological sites and landscapes;

    geo-reference and map the recorded features; and

    establish the beginnings of an archive of Armenian aerial imagery.

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