使用激光雷达重建波兰南部废弃山村的二战前景观

IF 2.1 3区 地球科学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY
Andrzej N. Affek, Jacek Wolski, Agnieszka Latocha, Maria Zachwatowicz, Małgorzata Wieczorek
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引用次数: 10

摘要

第二次世界大战后中欧的驱逐和被迫流离失所导致大多数人类活动的停止,引发了山区土地覆盖的大规模变化。然而,在永久废弃的村庄里,许多战前景观的痕迹仍然存在——印在微观地理学中。目前,它们构成了已不复存在的社区的独特文化遗产。因此,我们的主要目标是重建二战后废弃的山村的失落文化景观。案例研究区包括位于波兰南部的三个这样的村庄,两个位于喀尔巴阡山,一个位于苏台德。我们使用国家航空光探测和测距(LiDAR)数据集,结合档案地籍图和实地调查,检测与过去边界、道路网、农业和建筑相关的人工微观地形特征,并在景观背景下对其进行解释。我们证明,战前留下的人类足迹在很大程度上是由过去的土地所有权划分、土地使用和环境限制(与岩性、土壤和地形有关)形成的。我们的次要目标是评估激光雷达在重建过去景观方面的价值和应用机会。我们发现,使用激光雷达仍然可以检测到38-70%的非自然地块边界和65-79%的19世纪中期地籍图上标记的道路。因此,我们认为,起源于中世纪晚期并在二战前进行了改造的过去景观模式在浮雕中得到了很好的保存,激光雷达是重建二战后废弃山村过去景观的有效工具。我们还证实,定制的激光雷达可视化比现成的阴影数字高程模型(DEM)更具信息性,尤其是在与地籍和基于现场的数据集成时。我们得出的结论是,激光雷达的最大优势是能够为过去人类活动的孤立痕迹提供景观背景,从而重建过去社会形成的整个空间模式和相互关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

The use of LiDAR in reconstructing the pre-World War II landscapes of abandoned mountain villages in southern Poland

The use of LiDAR in reconstructing the pre-World War II landscapes of abandoned mountain villages in southern Poland

The cessation of most human activities resulting from post-World War II expulsions and forced displacements in Central Europe triggered massive land cover transformation in mountainous areas. However, many pre-War traces of past landscapes have survived—imprinted in microtopography—in permanently abandoned villages. Currently, they constitute unique cultural heritage of communities no longer in existence. Our main goal was therefore to reconstruct a lost cultural landscape of mountain villages abandoned after World War II (WWII). The case study area comprised three such villages located in southern Poland, two in the Carpathians and one in the Sudetes. We used the national airborne light detection and ranging (LiDAR) dataset combined with archival cadastral maps and field survey to detect man-made microtopographic features related to past boundaries, road network, agriculture and buildings and to interpret them in the landscape context. We demonstrated that the pre-War human footprint left in relief was shaped largely by past landownership divisions, land use and environmental constraints (related to lithology, soils and topography). Our secondary goal was to assess the value and application opportunities of LiDAR in reconstructing past landscapes. We showed that 38–70% of non-natural parcel boundaries and 65–79% of roads marked on mid-19th-century cadastral maps are still detectable using LiDAR. Therefore, we argue that the past landscape pattern, originating in late Middle Ages and subsequently transformed prior to WWII, remains well preserved in the relief and that LiDAR is an effective tool to reconstruct a past landscape of mountain villages abandoned after WWII. We also confirmed that customized LiDAR visualizations are more informative than ready-to-use shaded digital elevation models (DEMs), in particular when integrated with cadastral and field-based data. We conclude that the greatest advantage of LiDAR is the capacity to provide a landscape context for isolated traces of past human activity, allowing for the reconstruction of entire spatial patterns and interrelationships developed by past societies.

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来源期刊
Archaeological Prospection
Archaeological Prospection 地学-地球科学综合
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
11.10%
发文量
31
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The scope of the Journal will be international, covering urban, rural and marine environments and the full range of underlying geology. The Journal will contain articles relating to the use of a wide range of propecting techniques, including remote sensing (airborne and satellite), geophysical (e.g. resistivity, magnetometry) and geochemical (e.g. organic markers, soil phosphate). Reports and field evaluations of new techniques will be welcomed. Contributions will be encouraged on the application of relevant software, including G.I.S. analysis, to the data derived from prospection techniques and cartographic analysis of early maps. Reports on integrated site evaluations and follow-up site investigations will be particularly encouraged. The Journal will welcome contributions, in the form of short (field) reports, on the application of prospection techniques in support of comprehensive land-use studies. The Journal will, as appropriate, contain book reviews, conference and meeting reviews, and software evaluation. All papers will be subjected to peer review.
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