Data for “Identifying Landscape Modification Using Open Data and Tools: The Charcoal Hearths of the Blue Mountain, Pennsylvania”

The data and methods described were used to identify charcoal hearths on the Blue Mountain of eastern Pennsylvania. The data is derived from openly available LiDAR data and was modified using LASTools. This data was used to develop a methodology for the identification of charcoal hearths via a digit...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Benjamin Carter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2019-07-01
Series:Journal of Open Archaeology Data
Subjects:
ALS
Online Access:https://openarchaeologydata.metajnl.com/articles/53
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spelling doaj-38e624037429496bbb74175cdf821c0d2020-11-25T00:09:22ZengUbiquity PressJournal of Open Archaeology Data2049-15652019-07-01710.5334/joad.5333Data for “Identifying Landscape Modification Using Open Data and Tools: The Charcoal Hearths of the Blue Mountain, Pennsylvania”Benjamin Carter0Muhlenberg College, Allentown, PAThe data and methods described were used to identify charcoal hearths on the Blue Mountain of eastern Pennsylvania. The data is derived from openly available LiDAR data and was modified using LASTools. This data was used to develop a methodology for the identification of charcoal hearths via a digital elevation model, a hillshade model and a slope analysis. This enabled the identification of 758 potential charcoal hearths. Data and detailed methods description are stored in Open Context and Zenodo. The technique used to produce this data has very high reuse potential since the tools employed are all open source and LiDAR data is often openly available for many states within the US, as well as other countries. An article for the journal, Historical Archaeology, that argues for openness in historical archaeology and utilizes this data has been published recently [1].   Funding statement: The work completed by Heather Lash was directly funded by the Office of the Provost of Muhlenberg College. Training (see acknowledgements) was funded through the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Science Foundation.https://openarchaeologydata.metajnl.com/articles/53Airborne Laser ScanningALSLiDARLight Detection and RangingFOSSCharcoalIron Production
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Benjamin Carter
spellingShingle Benjamin Carter
Data for “Identifying Landscape Modification Using Open Data and Tools: The Charcoal Hearths of the Blue Mountain, Pennsylvania”
Journal of Open Archaeology Data
Airborne Laser Scanning
ALS
LiDAR
Light Detection and Ranging
FOSS
Charcoal
Iron Production
author_facet Benjamin Carter
author_sort Benjamin Carter
title Data for “Identifying Landscape Modification Using Open Data and Tools: The Charcoal Hearths of the Blue Mountain, Pennsylvania”
title_short Data for “Identifying Landscape Modification Using Open Data and Tools: The Charcoal Hearths of the Blue Mountain, Pennsylvania”
title_full Data for “Identifying Landscape Modification Using Open Data and Tools: The Charcoal Hearths of the Blue Mountain, Pennsylvania”
title_fullStr Data for “Identifying Landscape Modification Using Open Data and Tools: The Charcoal Hearths of the Blue Mountain, Pennsylvania”
title_full_unstemmed Data for “Identifying Landscape Modification Using Open Data and Tools: The Charcoal Hearths of the Blue Mountain, Pennsylvania”
title_sort data for “identifying landscape modification using open data and tools: the charcoal hearths of the blue mountain, pennsylvania”
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Journal of Open Archaeology Data
issn 2049-1565
publishDate 2019-07-01
description The data and methods described were used to identify charcoal hearths on the Blue Mountain of eastern Pennsylvania. The data is derived from openly available LiDAR data and was modified using LASTools. This data was used to develop a methodology for the identification of charcoal hearths via a digital elevation model, a hillshade model and a slope analysis. This enabled the identification of 758 potential charcoal hearths. Data and detailed methods description are stored in Open Context and Zenodo. The technique used to produce this data has very high reuse potential since the tools employed are all open source and LiDAR data is often openly available for many states within the US, as well as other countries. An article for the journal, Historical Archaeology, that argues for openness in historical archaeology and utilizes this data has been published recently [1].   Funding statement: The work completed by Heather Lash was directly funded by the Office of the Provost of Muhlenberg College. Training (see acknowledgements) was funded through the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Science Foundation.
topic Airborne Laser Scanning
ALS
LiDAR
Light Detection and Ranging
FOSS
Charcoal
Iron Production
url https://openarchaeologydata.metajnl.com/articles/53
work_keys_str_mv AT benjamincarter dataforidentifyinglandscapemodificationusingopendataandtoolsthecharcoalhearthsofthebluemountainpennsylvania
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