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Evaluating Handheld GPS Receivers for Recording Archaeological Survey Data GEO444 – Practical GPS William Eichmann and Jake Reidel
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Archaeological Survey Data Survey areas: agricultural field boundaries, areas surveyed, surface conditions, transect interval, often visible on satellite images, polygons, certainty=10m. Individual artifacts: “isolated finds” reflect diffuse activities across landscape, diagnostic artifacts, points, certainty=2-5m. Sites: concentrated areas of material culture, amorphous and fuzzy boundaries, comprised of individual artifacts, polygons, certainty=10m.
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Time and Cost How much time does the method take relative to other methods? How does it compare with other methods in terms of accuracy?
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Field Site: UW Aboretum
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Google Earth
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Methods Vehicle 2 recievers Garmin Etrex and Vista Digital camera computer Software: GPS Babel, Google Earth pro. Date of fieldwork: 2008.05.05 Time of fieldwork: 16:47-18:50 Waypoints: measured for 1 min. Tracks measurement frequency: 5 sec. (p14), 30sec (p12)
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Data Analysis
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Field conditions
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Waypoints
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Results: Waypoints / Routes
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Masking
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Tracks
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Visual Comparison
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Discussion Both waypoints/routes and tracks are sufficiently accurate and precise for defining field and site boundaries. Tracks take less time and provide better accuracy with similar precision to waypoints/routes Tracks may be better suited to recording amorphous shapes of sites Record individual artifacts as waypoints. Tall vegetation masks satellites
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Conclusion and Improvements Survey areas: collect several control points and define fields based on satellite images. Individual artifacts: record as waypoints Sites: record with tracks Equipment: use a GPS receiver/data collector with loaded background images.
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