Confidence and Coverage Modeling in Marine Magnetometer Survey Part I: Perspectives on the Application to the Federal Management of Archaeological Resources
Author(s): John Bright; David Conlin; Brandi Carrier; William Hoffman
Year: 2014
Summary
The National Park Service’s Submerged Resources Center and the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management’s Office of Renewable Energy Programs have developed and tested a geospatial tool designed to automate the processing of magnetometer data. Field tested by a NPS/BOEM team across a variety of submerged cultural materials during the summer of 2013, the tool operates via a mathematical algorithm that models a ferromagnetic object’s detectability as a function of its size, magnetic field strength, and distance from sensor. The tool produces a suite of statistical information that presents both a visualization of a dataset’s coverage and a measure of confidence in the mass of objects potentially detected or missed by a magnetometer survey. This paper discusses the roots of the collaboration and considers the implications and intended application of this research to the federal management of archaeological resources.
Cite this Record
Confidence and Coverage Modeling in Marine Magnetometer Survey Part I: Perspectives on the Application to the Federal Management of Archaeological Resources. John Bright, David Conlin, Brandi Carrier, William Hoffman. Presented at Society for Historical Archaeology, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. 2014 ( tDAR id: 437099)
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Individual & Institutional Roles
Contact(s): Society for Historical Archaeology
Record Identifiers
PaperId(s): SYM-56,06