Examinations of airborne scans, using light detection and ranging (LiDAR), of three New England towns have revealed networks of old stone walls, building foundations, old roads, dams and other features. Here, an abandoned farmstead in Preston, Conn., is hidden from view in this 2012 aerial photograph and only visible in the LiDAR scan of the area from 2010 (right). Credit: (aerial) Connecticut Environmental Conditions Online (CTECO); (LiDAR) 2010 USDA NRCS
By Wynne Parry, LiveScience Contributor | January 16, 2014 02:46pm ET
Take a walk in the New England woods, and you may stumble upon the
overgrown remains of a building's foundation or the stacked stones of a
wall. Now, researchers have begun uncovering these relics from the air.
Examinations of airborne scans of three New England towns
revealed networks of old stone walls, building foundations, old roads,
dams and other features, many of which long were forgotten. These
features speak to a history that Katharine Johnson, an archaeologist and
study researcher, wants to see elucidated.
She and others know the story in broad strokes: After European settlers
arrived in the 17th century, thousands of acres of forest were cleared
to make way for much more intensive agriculture than that practiced by
indigenous people. In the 19th century, people began leaving for
industrial towns, allowing the forests to overtake their former farms.
"I think there is a general idea of what was happening, but it is not
as well understood as it could be," Johnson, a doctoral student at the
University of Connecticut, told LiveScience. [See the Aerial Images of 'Lost' Archaeological Sites in New England]
New Englanders have long known about these relics of the agricultural
past. But Johnson and William Ouimet, her adviser and co-author,
harnessed a new way to look for them, one that has proved useful in
other places.
They looked at publicly available data collected by using a remote-sensing technology known as light detection and ranging (LiDAR).
These scans map the surface below using laser pulses, and they make it
possible for researchers to look below tree cover. LiDAR has
increasingly been used in archaeology of late, with researchers, aided
by the technology, finding the ancient capital of the Khmer Empire, Angkor, was even more massive
than previously thought. LiDAR has also revealed a lost city beneath
the Cambodian jungle (near Angkor) as well as evidence of Ciudad Blanca,
a never-confirmed legendary metropolis, hidden by Honduran rain forests.
In the new study, Johnson and Ouimet focused on parts of three rural
towns: Ashford, Conn.; Tiverton, R.I.; and Westport, Mass. In the scans,
stone walls showed up as thin linear ridges, forming enclosures that
were likely once fields, lining old thoroughfares, and clustering around
the foundations at the heart of old farmsteads.
The LiDAR also picks up on modern features, leading to potential
confusion. Old building foundations can resemble modern swimming pools,
for example. To verify what they see in LiDAR data, Johnson and Ouimet
have been visiting sites.
This new information is best used in combination with historical documents, Johnson said.
"On a historical map, you might see just one dot, and a person's name
representing a farmstead, but if you compare that with the LiDAR you
might see all of the buildings, in addition to the layout, and the
fields, and the road leading to it," she said.
Sometimes the past lives on in the modern landscape. Many stone walls
that showed up in the scans of Westport, Mass., delineated property
lines, both in modern times and on a map from 1712, she said.
This research will be detailed in the March issue of the Journal of Archaeological Science, and is now available online.
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