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      Lidar data and the Izapa polity: new results and methodological issues from tropical Mesoamerica

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          Airborne LiDAR, archaeology, and the ancient Maya landscape at Caracol, Belize

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            Correction of laser scanning intensity data: Data and model-driven approaches

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              Uncovering archaeological landscapes at Angkor using lidar.

              Previous archaeological mapping work on the successive medieval capitals of the Khmer Empire located at Angkor, in northwest Cambodia (∼9th to 15th centuries in the Common Era, C.E.), has identified it as the largest settlement complex of the preindustrial world, and yet crucial areas have remained unmapped, in particular the ceremonial centers and their surroundings, where dense forest obscures the traces of the civilization that typically remain in evidence in surface topography. Here we describe the use of airborne laser scanning (lidar) technology to create high-precision digital elevation models of the ground surface beneath the vegetation cover. We identify an entire, previously undocumented, formally planned urban landscape into which the major temples such as Angkor Wat were integrated. Beyond these newly identified urban landscapes, the lidar data reveal anthropogenic changes to the landscape on a vast scale and lend further weight to an emerging consensus that infrastructural complexity, unsustainable modes of subsistence, and climate variation were crucial factors in the decline of the classical Khmer civilization.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences
                Archaeol Anthropol Sci
                Springer Nature
                1866-9557
                1866-9565
                December 2015
                August 29 2014
                December 2015
                : 7
                : 4
                : 487-504
                Article
                10.1007/s12520-014-0210-7
                f359210d-0818-4a20-9850-8d64d6544f9b
                © 2015
                History

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