SAR Imaging of Archaeological Sites on Intertidal Flats in the German Wadden Sea
Título
SAR Imaging of Archaeological Sites on Intertidal Flats in the German Wadden Sea
Autor
Martin Gade, Jörn Kohlus, Cornelia Kost
Descripción
We show that high-resolution space-borne synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery with pixel sizes smaller than 1 m2 can be used to complement archaeological surveys on intertidal flats. After major storm surges in the 14th and 17th centuries (“Grote Mandrenke”), vast areas on the German North Sea coast were lost to the sea. Areas of settlements and historical farmland were buried under sediments for centuries, but when the surface layer is driven away under the action of wind, currents, and waves, they appear again on the Wadden Sea surface. However, frequent flooding and erosion of the intertidal flats make any archaeological monitoring a difficult task, so that remote sensing techniques appear to be an efficient and cost-effective instrument for any archaeological surveillance of that area. Space-borne SAR images clearly show remains of farmhouse foundations and of former systems of ditches, dating back to the times before the “Grote Mandrenke”. In particular, the very high-resolution acquisition (“staring spotlight”) mode of the TerraSAR/TanDEM-X satellites allows detecting various kinds of remains of historical land use at high precision. Moreover, SARs working at lower microwave frequencies (e.g., that on Radarsat-2) may complement archaeological surveys of historical cultural traces, some of which have been unknown so far.
Fecha
2017
Materia
storm surge, cultural traces, German Wadden Sea, intertidal flats, synthetic aperture radar, TerraSAR-X, St. Marcellus Flood, Burchardi Flood
Identificador
DOI: 10.3390/geosciences7040105
Fuente
Geosciences
Editor
MDPI AG
Cobertura
Geology
Idioma
EN
Colección
Citación
Martin Gade, Jörn Kohlus, Cornelia Kost, “SAR Imaging of Archaeological Sites on Intertidal Flats in the German Wadden Sea,” SOCICT Open, consulta 19 de abril de 2026, https://socictopen.socict.org/items/show/2268.
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