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- Journal Article
- A2
- open access
‘Winter camp’ 1917 : integrated conflict archaeology on the Messines Ridge 1914-1918 (Belgium)
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Using the past to indicate the possible presence of relics in the present-day landscape : the Western Front of the Great War in Belgium
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Validating land-based FDEM data and derived conductivity maps : assessment of signal calibration, signal attenuation and the impact of heterogeneity
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Evaluation of fluxgate magnetometry and electromagnetic induction surveys for subsurface characterization of archaeological features in World War 1 battlefields
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Telling the stories behind the preservation of WWI-relics in Flanders Fields by using aerial photographs and LiDAR data
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Scratching the surface of war : airborne laser scans of the Great War conflict landscape in Flanders (Belgium)
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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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Removal of sensor tilt noise in fluxgate gradiometer survey data by applying one-dimensional wavelet filtering
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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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- Conference Paper
- C3
- open access
Military landscape : different policies of military cemeteries and the surrounding landscape in Flanders Fields through the last century
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The Ypres Salient 1914–1918 : historical aerial photography and the landscape of war
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Reconstructing early neolithic paleogeography : EMI-vased subsurface modeling and chronological modeling of Holocene peat below the Lower Scheldt floodplain in NW Belgium
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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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The First World War from above and below : historical aerial photographs and mine craters in the Ypres Salient
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The Archaeology of World War I in Comines-Warneton (Belgium) through Aerial Photographs and Proximal Soil Sensing
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Evaluating corrections for a horizontal offset between sensor and position data for surveys on land
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- Conference Paper
- C3
- open access
Identifying relations between the dynamic military landscape and network of linear features throughout the Great War
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Historical aerial photography and multi-receiver EMI soil sensing, complementing techniques for the study of a Great War conflict landscape
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Predicting saturated hydraulic conductivity in a sandy grassland using proximally sensed apparent electrical conductivity
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EMI as a non-invasive survey technique to account for the interaction between WW I relicts and the soil environment at the Western front