posted on 2015-07-01, 13:54authored byMark Gillings
Analyses of visibility have become a commonplace within landscape-based archaeological research,
whether through rich description, simple mapping or formal modelling and statistical analysis, the
latter increasingly carried out using the viewshed functionality of GIS. The research presented here
challenges current obsessions with what is visible to focus instead upon the interpretative benefits
of considering the invisible and the complex interplay of visibility and concealment that frequently
accompany landscape movement and experience. Having highlighted the difficulties in analysing
relational properties such as invisibility and hiding using traditional archaeological techniques, a
series of new GIS methodologies are presented and evaluated in the context of an original study of a
series of remarkably small, visually non-intrusive prehistoric megalithic monuments. The results
serve to challenge dominant interpretations of these enigmatic sites as well as demonstrating the
utility, value and potential of the GIS-based approaches developed.
History
Citation
Journal of Archaeological Science (2015)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF ARTS, HUMANITIES AND LAW/School of Archaeology and Ancient History
Version
AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Published in
Journal of Archaeological Science (2015)
Publisher
Elsevier, Association for Environmental Archaeology