Deepwater Archaeology: Advancements, Opportunities, and Limitations
Part of: Society for Historical Archaeology 2014
Marine archaeology continues to evolve as surveys expand beyond deepwater (areas 500-1000 meters deep) into ultra-deepwater (areas deeper than 1500 meters) around the globe. While the archaeological principles remain the same regardless of depth, often the tools, research questions, opportunities, and challenges are significantly different from those found in shallower waters. This session explores the intricacies of archaeology in deepwater and the difficulties that often accompany a deepwater project. The papers in this session seek to address topics ranging from how archaeologists are currently studying these sites, the tools available, and the research designs and methodologies employed; to public outreach initiatives, opportunities for young professionals, and the future direction of the field as a whole.
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-9 of 9)
- Documents (9)
- Comparative Analysis of Data Sets from Deepwater Surveys: Archaeological, Geological, and Biological Encounters in the Gulf of Mexico (2014)
- Down, Down, Down in the Depths: A Critical Look at Deepwater Archaeology and Public Outreach in the Gulf of Mexico (2014)
- The Excavation of the Wreck of the Lune; a Laboratory for the Archaeology of the Abyss (2014)
- Falling in the Deep End: Interpretation of Archaeological Sites in Deep Water (2014)
- Got Microbes? A Multidisciplinary Analysis of Microbial Response to the Deepwater Horizon Spill and Its Impact on Gulf of Mexico Shipwrecks (2014)
- Lophelia II Project Shipwreck Component: Final Assessment and Project Analysis (2014)
- Questions Unasked: Do Answers lie in Existing Deepwater Data? (2014)
- An ROV for Underwater archaeology (2014)
- Teaching from the Deep (2014)