Using a selection of archaeological cases studies from the Roman period in the Mediterranean region, Pedro Trapero Fernández shows how GIS technologies can be employed in the creation of spatial models to reproduce historical realities. An increasing number of researchers use this digital humanities tool as a means to model both territory and landscape. This book compiles different spatial models under a unified methodology described in separated chapters, such as mobility and visibility models, and discusses their limitations and potential for implementation in archaeological contexts. The result is a detailed analysis of each method, which consequently results in an accessible manual for understanding GIS technologies. Designed for students and scholars with varying degrees of training in GIS, who intend to carry out spatial analysis and historical models, the approach of this book establishes a reference framework to work with GIS technologies in other historical periods. Trapero concludes by discussing the future of GIS and spatial analysis, and how it can be studied and used as a methodological approach in archaeological practice and research.
Pedro Trapero Fernández is a Postdoctoral Researcher in Ancient History and Archaeology at the University of Cádiz, Spain.
List of IllustrationsIntroduction1. GIS Applied to History and Archaeology2. GIS Software and Tips3. Resources and Methodology4. Access to Resources5. Land Use Models6. Restitution of Historical Llandscapes7. Mobility Models7. Visibility Models8. Boundaries and Prediction Models9. Perspectives and Future Lines of ActionNotesBibliographyIndex