Exploring the Antonine Wall with Terrestrial Remote Sensing
Richard E Jones author William S Hanson author Nick Hannon author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Archaeopress
Published:1st Aug '24
Should be back in stock very soon

Exploring the Antonine Wall with terrestrial remote sensing has three main aims. The first is to make more widely available the data from the numerous geophysical surveys that have been undertaken at sites on the Antonine Wall over the last 20 years. Most of these surveys are currently inaccessible to a wider audience in unpublished technical reports. Since much of the original work was undertaken by specialists in the acquisition of geophysical data, rather than in Roman military archaeology, the second aim is to re-analyse this data and provide more focused interpretations of the results for each site. These are based on the authors’ collectively wide background knowledge of both the monument and the application of geophysical survey in archaeology. The third aim is to offer some wider archaeological and geophysical conclusions, drawing attention to a number of areas where our understanding of the Antonine Wall has been enhanced by the geophysics and considering how the long history of such survey applied to a single monument serves to highlight both the strengths and weaknesses of the methodology.
'Overall, although this volume will perhaps be most relevant for students and scholars who area engaged in serious studies upon the Antonine Wall, the result is an up to date and very readable account of the archaeology of the Wall as it stands at present and so should be readily approachable for the general reader.
The volume has a Bibliography which runs to nearly nine full pages, but no Index. However, the structure of the narrative is clear and straightforward, so that the list of the reports on the Contents pages should enable readers to find their ways to what they want quite quickly. The volume is available as an Open Access document on the Archaeopress web site, or else it can be obtained as a printed version for £45, which price probably reflects the cost of printing and binding on demand. An impressive amount of work has gone into this volume and it reflects credit upon the authors, and to Archaeopress for shepherding it into the public domain.' – John Poulter (2025): Itinera, vol. 5
ISBN: 9781803278018
Dimensions: 290mm x 205mm x 12mm
Weight: 1420g
256 pages