Spectral Discrimination of Archaeological Sites Previously Occupied by Farming Communities Using In Situ Hyperspectral Data

This study investigates the ability of field spectra measurements to discriminate between soils from non-sites (natural soils) and from archaeological sites, such as middens (rubbish-dumping areas) and animal byres. First, we tested whether there is a difference in the concentration of elements betw...

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Main Authors: Olaotse Lokwalo Thabeng, Elhadi Adam, Stefania Merlo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2019-01-01
Series:Journal of Spectroscopy
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/5158465
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spelling doaj-24d05986bca841bb8b290f87cfbe48df2020-11-25T01:29:08ZengHindawi LimitedJournal of Spectroscopy2314-49202314-49392019-01-01201910.1155/2019/51584655158465Spectral Discrimination of Archaeological Sites Previously Occupied by Farming Communities Using In Situ Hyperspectral DataOlaotse Lokwalo Thabeng0Elhadi Adam1Stefania Merlo2Archaeology Unit, University of Botswana, 4775 Notwane Rd, Private Bag, UB 00703, Gaborone, BotswanaSchool of Geography, Archaeology and Environmental Studies, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg 2050, South AfricaSchool of Geography, Archaeology and Environmental Studies, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg 2050, South AfricaThis study investigates the ability of field spectra measurements to discriminate between soils from non-sites (natural soils) and from archaeological sites, such as middens (rubbish-dumping areas) and animal byres. First, we tested whether there is a difference in the concentration of elements between different soil types using analysis of variance while random forest (RF) and forward variable selection (FVS) methods were used to select important soil elements for the classification of the archaeological sites. In the second approach, we evaluated the ability of field spectroscopy reflectance measurements to discriminate among nonsites, middens, vitrified dung, and nonvitrified dung byres. The guided regularised random forest (GRRF) was used to identify important wavelengths for the discrimination of abovementioned archaeological and nonarchaeological soils. Thereafter, the selected soil elements and wavelengths were used as input variables in the RF classification algorithm to classify the nonsites, middens, vitrified dung, and nonvitrified dung. The findings reveal that there is a significant difference in the composition of chemical elements and spectral signatures of nonsites, middens, vitrified dung, and nonvitrified dung. In summary, high classification accuracies achieved when using field spectroscopy data prove that remote sensing techniques can be used to exploit the spectral differences among the abovementioned soil types in mapping archaeological feature characteristics of farming communities’ settlements.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/5158465
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olaotse Lokwalo Thabeng
Elhadi Adam
Stefania Merlo
spellingShingle Olaotse Lokwalo Thabeng
Elhadi Adam
Stefania Merlo
Spectral Discrimination of Archaeological Sites Previously Occupied by Farming Communities Using In Situ Hyperspectral Data
Journal of Spectroscopy
author_facet Olaotse Lokwalo Thabeng
Elhadi Adam
Stefania Merlo
author_sort Olaotse Lokwalo Thabeng
title Spectral Discrimination of Archaeological Sites Previously Occupied by Farming Communities Using In Situ Hyperspectral Data
title_short Spectral Discrimination of Archaeological Sites Previously Occupied by Farming Communities Using In Situ Hyperspectral Data
title_full Spectral Discrimination of Archaeological Sites Previously Occupied by Farming Communities Using In Situ Hyperspectral Data
title_fullStr Spectral Discrimination of Archaeological Sites Previously Occupied by Farming Communities Using In Situ Hyperspectral Data
title_full_unstemmed Spectral Discrimination of Archaeological Sites Previously Occupied by Farming Communities Using In Situ Hyperspectral Data
title_sort spectral discrimination of archaeological sites previously occupied by farming communities using in situ hyperspectral data
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Journal of Spectroscopy
issn 2314-4920
2314-4939
publishDate 2019-01-01
description This study investigates the ability of field spectra measurements to discriminate between soils from non-sites (natural soils) and from archaeological sites, such as middens (rubbish-dumping areas) and animal byres. First, we tested whether there is a difference in the concentration of elements between different soil types using analysis of variance while random forest (RF) and forward variable selection (FVS) methods were used to select important soil elements for the classification of the archaeological sites. In the second approach, we evaluated the ability of field spectroscopy reflectance measurements to discriminate among nonsites, middens, vitrified dung, and nonvitrified dung byres. The guided regularised random forest (GRRF) was used to identify important wavelengths for the discrimination of abovementioned archaeological and nonarchaeological soils. Thereafter, the selected soil elements and wavelengths were used as input variables in the RF classification algorithm to classify the nonsites, middens, vitrified dung, and nonvitrified dung. The findings reveal that there is a significant difference in the composition of chemical elements and spectral signatures of nonsites, middens, vitrified dung, and nonvitrified dung. In summary, high classification accuracies achieved when using field spectroscopy data prove that remote sensing techniques can be used to exploit the spectral differences among the abovementioned soil types in mapping archaeological feature characteristics of farming communities’ settlements.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/5158465
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AT elhadiadam spectraldiscriminationofarchaeologicalsitespreviouslyoccupiedbyfarmingcommunitiesusinginsituhyperspectraldata
AT stefaniamerlo spectraldiscriminationofarchaeologicalsitespreviouslyoccupiedbyfarmingcommunitiesusinginsituhyperspectraldata
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