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The Currency of Cost GIS Cost Surface Analysis and Environmental Bias Terry Beaulieu, PhD Candidate 17 May 2014 FACULTY OF ARTS Department of Archaeology
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Least Cost Path Overview: Raster Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Least Cost Path Overview: Raster Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Least Cost Path Overview: Raster Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Least Cost Path Overview: Raster Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Least Cost Path Overview: Raster Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Least Cost Path: Archaeological Applications Most applications tend to employ only environmental measures — Slope, elevation, vegetation etc. Leads to accusations of excessive environmental determinism Most likely caused by the often unrecognized inherent bias intrinsic to GIS analyses Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Least Cost Path Bias: Economic Efficiency Fits well with free market economics and neoliberal theory An often unrecognized source of potential bias in Archaeological Least Cost Path Analysis Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost Least Cost Path Analysis is a measure of economic efficiency We are bombarded daily with messages extolling the virtues of maximizing efficiency 17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Least Cost Path Bias: Economic Efficiency Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Least Cost Path Bias: Economic Efficiency The two most common currencies employed by archaeologists conducting Leas Cost Path analysis Time — e.g. Tobler’s Hiking Function Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost Energy — e.g. Pandorf et al’s and Santee et al’s Metabolic rate formulas 17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Least Cost Path Bias: Terminology ‘Cost’ and ‘friction’ are negative terms Evoke ideas that restrict and constrain travel and present barriers to movement Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost Tends to result in the privileging of environmental variables over more cultural measures More to movement than simply avoiding physical obstacles 17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Least Cost Path Bias: Terminology Replace ‘Cost Raster’ and ‘Friction Surface’ with ‘Favourability Raster’ or ‘Desirability Surface’ Move beyond limiting factors and consider variables that promote or enhance movement e.g. a ‘good’ view Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Study Area Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Study Area Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Modern Example: Rosemary to Gem Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Modern Example: Rosemary to Gem Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Modern Example: Rosemary to Gem Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Modern Example: Rosemary to Gem Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Modern Example: Rosemary to Gem Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Modern Example: Rosemary to Gem Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Prehistoric Example: Trail Junction to Hunting Hill Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Prehistoric Example: Trail Junction to Hunting Hill Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Prehistoric Example: Trail Junction to Hunting Hill Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Prehistoric Example: Trail Junction to Hunting Hill 17 May 2014Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of CostTerry Beaulieu
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Prehistoric Example: Trail Junction to Hunting Hill 17 May 2014Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of CostTerry Beaulieu
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Prehistoric Example: Trail Junction to Hunting Hill Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of Cost17 May 2014Terry Beaulieu
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Conclusion Least Cost Path is a measure of economic efficiency — Currencies used by archaeologists tend to privilege environmental variables over cultural ones Raster terminology leads to focus on physical barriers — Result is currencies that privilege environmental measures Appearance of excessive environmental determinism is caused by these unacknowledged GIS biases Recognition of GIS biases will allow archaeologists to mitigate the negative affects of those biases — Address the charge of environmental determinism — Create richer, more satisfying archaeological models 17 May 2014Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of CostTerry Beaulieu
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Thank You 17 May 2014Canadian Archaeological Association: Currency of CostTerry Beaulieu
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