TY - GEN N2 - Neolithic Thessaly has been traditionally studied to understand human partitioning and territoriality of the landscape by non-hierarchical human groups. Thessaly is a region of low relief with extensive coastline and a great alluvial plain, where hundreds of Neolithic settlements/tells called magoules were established from the Early Neolithic period until the Bronze Age. Archaeological data was collected forming a corpus of surveyed and excavated sites and settlements, differentiated by type, size or time-scale of occupation. Reconstruction of the Neolithic landscape was based on synthesis of geological maps, records of stratigraphic data collected from a total of 400 boreholes and the indexing of past studies relative to the geomorphological changes that have affected Neolithic Thessaly from Holocene until today. These were spatially and statistically processed to estimate the amount of alluvial deposits and their distribution on the Thessalian plain from the Early Neolithic period to the present. CY - Bonn AV - public Y1 - 2008/// ID - propylaeumdok560 TI - Reconstructing the neolithic landscape of Thessaly through a GIS and geological approach UR - https://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/propylaeumdok/560/ A1 - Alexakis, Dimitris A1 - Astaras, Theodoros A1 - Sarris, Apostolos A1 - Vouzaxakis, Kostas ER - TY - GEN AV - public TI - Recovering the urban network of ancient Sikyon through multi-component geophysical approaches N2 - A suite of different geophysical techniques was applied in the course of multidisciplinary research conducted within the framework of the Sikyon survey project, whose goal is the study of the landscape and human activity on the plateau of ancient Sikyon (NE Peloponnese). During the first 3 years of the geophysical campaign, more than 60,000 m2 of the city centre were covered using magnetic measurements,electrical resistivity mapping and tomography techniques, and ground penetrating radar. Controlled experiments covering large sections of the site using different methods and instrumentation allowed the evaluation of these methods? effectiveness in detecting and mapping the subsurface targets and improved representation of the lateral and stratigraphic extent of the architectural remnants. Already a number of architectural features and even whole structures have been identified and mapped, starting to reveal the urban network of the ancient city and its diachronic phases. CY - Bonn EP - 16 Y1 - 2008/// SP - 11 ID - propylaeumdok486 A1 - Sarris, Apostolos A1 - Papadopoulos, Nikos A1 - Trigkas, Vasilis UR - https://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/propylaeumdok/486/ ER - TY - GEN N2 - The Digital Archaeological Atlas of Crete, part of a larger campaign (Digital Crete: Mediterranean Itineraries), was implemented under the framework of the Greek Operational Program ?Information Society?, part of the ?eEurope? initiative of the European Union which is funded by the 3rd European Community Support Framework. A program module was constructed in order to create a database warehouse for cultural heritage sites on the island of Crete in the South Aegean Sea. A combination of internet-accessible databases, web-GIS techniques and multimedia, provides for the integrated and wide dissemination of cultural information, while contributing to a better understanding of the cultural environment and the influence of the natural environment on the history of the settlement of Crete. ID - propylaeumdok541 A1 - Sarris, Apostolos A1 - Trigkas, Vasilis A1 - Papadakis, Giorgos A1 - Papazoglou, Michalis TI - A web-GIS approach to cultural resources management in Crete: the digital archaeological atlas of Crete UR - https://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/propylaeumdok/541/ Y1 - 2008/// CY - Bonn AV - public ER -