Project: Landscape Archaeology of the Great War: a Non-Invasive Approach
2014-01-01 – 2019-10-31
- Abstract
The front zone of World War I left deep traces in the landscape, but also the landscape influenced the course of the war activities.The idea is that by reconstructing the evolution of the landscape a better understanding of this mutual influence will be obtained and can be used to set up a valuation map of potentially valuable locations or phenomena.
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The archaeology of World War I tanks in the Ypres Salient (Belgium) : a non-invasive approach
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A new evaluation approach of World War One's devastated front zone : a shell hole density map based on historical aerial photographs and validated by electromagnetic induction field measurements to link the metal shrapnel phenomenon
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Proper en gestructureerd? Een Brits-Australisch soldatenkamp vanonder de zoden
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- Conference Paper
- C3
- open access
Insights in the possibilities of an electromagnetic induction sensor to map the military remains, buried in the former World War 1 front zone
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Non-invasive research of tunneling heritage in the Ypres Salient (1914-1918) : research of the Tor Top tunnel system
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The Ypres Salient 1914–1918 : historical aerial photography and the landscape of war
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Van schop en truweel naar vliegtuig en laser. Landschapsarcheologie van de Groote Oorlog