14 research outputs found

    Magnetometerprospektion im jungsteinzeitlichen Hornsteinbergwerk von Arnhofen (Stadt Abensberg, Lkr. Kelheim, Niederbayern)

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    Ergebnisse der Prospektion des neolithischen Silexreviers von Arnhofe

    Archäologie am Fuße des Pamirgebirges – Mit Magnetometer und Kappameter im Süden Tadschikistans

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    Ergebnisse geophysikalischer Prospektion in Tadschikista

    Magnetometry of neolithic sites in the Mil Plain of Azerbaijan

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    Ergebnisse geophysikalischer Prospektionen in der Milsteppe in Aserbaidscha

    Geophysikalische Prospektion im neolithischen Silexrevier von Arnhofen (Stadt Abensberg, Lkr. Kelheim, Niederbayern)

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    Ergebnisse der geophysikalischen Prospektion im neolithischen Silexrevier von Arnhofe

    Magnetometermessung einer umfriedeten bandkeramischen Siedlung bei Wipfeld (Lkr. Schweinfurt, Unterfranken)

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    Ergebnisse geophysikalischer Prospektion einer neolithischen Siedlung bei Wipfel

    Newly Discovered Settlements of the Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age in Southwest Tajikistan: Preliminary Excavation Results and First Site Maps based on Magnetometer Prospection

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    Ergebnisse archäologischer und geophysikalischer Untersuchungen einer Siedlung der späten Bronzezeit und frühen Eisenzeit im Südwesten Tadschikistan

    Ancient Charax Spasinou (Iraq) – Interpreting a multi-phase city based on magnetometer survey data

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    The ancient city of Charax Spasinou was situated in southern Iraq near Basra, between the rivers Tigris and Eulaios, at the modern location Jebel Khayaber. It offers the opportunity to study the layout and functionality of a major urban city dating from the Seleucid to the Sasanian period. The city was originally founded by Alexander the Great and given the name Alexandria (Campbell et al. 2019: 215). After its destruction by flooding, it was re-founded in BC 166/165 by the Seleucid king Antiochos IV and re-named Antiochia. This settlement was again destroyed by flooding. It was rebuilt under Hyspaosines and named Charax Spasinou (ancient Greek for ‘palisade of [Hy]spa[o]sines’). Due to its favourable location Charax became a very important harbour in the Persian Gulf area and a major trading point between India and Babylonia, supplying goods further up to the Mediterranean (Campbell et al. 2019). Charax was first identified with Jebel Khayaber in 1965, when distinctive ramparts with an average height of 4m to 6m were documented (Hansman 1967: 39). In 2016 Jane Moon, Robert Killick and Stuart Campbell (University of Manchester), together with Stefan Hauser (University of Konstanz) and the Iraqi State Board for Antiquities & Heritage, started a project to document and protect the ancient city of Charax Spasinou. The aim is to investigate the site through an integration of remote sensing technologies and surface survey as well as limited excavations in order to reconstruct the city layout, its  chronology and to document its state of preservation for purposes of conservation and site management.Digital ArchaeologyArchaeology of the Near Eas

    3D-Reconstruction of Roman Sites in Bavaria based on Geophysical Results

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    Ergebnisse der geophysikalischen Prospektion und 3D-Rekonstruktion römischer Militärlager in Bayer

    The Neolithic Flint Mine of Arnhofen in Lower Bavaria, Southern Germany: Aerial Archaeology, Magnetometry and Ground-Penetrating Radar Surveys

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    Ergebnisse der Luftbildarchäologie und der geophysikalischen Prospektion im neolithischen Silexrevier von Arnhofe
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