کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
1035996 | 943873 | 2011 | 19 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

In the 1920s pilots overflying the Transjordan panhandle discovered thousands of enigmatic stone-built structures which the beduin called ‘’The Works of the Old Men’. We now know these works are several thousand years old, extend from Syria to Yemen and probably number a million or more, making them far older and significantly more extensive than Peru’s Nazca Lines. Like the latter they are often unseen and seldom intelligible at ground level. Now an aerial reconnaissance programme in Jordan and high-resolution satellite imagery from Google Earth for large areas of Arabia is vastly expanding the database bringing transformation and opportunity. Despite regional and diachronic variations, these works are plainly parts of an immense prehistoric cultural continuum surviving as hunting traps, funerary/religious sites and seasonal camps. Extensive sampling and test-mapping show patterns and associations which suggest methodologies for developing a remote sensing programme to record, map and begin analysis for interior Arabia as a whole. On such foundations may be built interdisciplinary collaboration to interpret and explain this little-known human landscape on the fringes of the Fertile Crescent.
► Remote sensing access – aerial reconnaissance and Google Earth.
► Interior ‘Arabia’ from Syria to Yemen.
► Pre-Islamic stone structures.
► Interpretation, mapping and analysis of stone structures.
► Defining the extent, range and patterns of the ‘Works of the Old Men’.
Journal: Journal of Archaeological Science - Volume 38, Issue 12, December 2011, Pages 3185–3203