Title :
A high-frequency, narrow-beam sub bottom profiler for archaeological applications
Author :
Mindell, David A. ; Bingham, Brian
Author_Institution :
Res. Group in Deep Sea Archaeology, MIT, MA, USA
Abstract :
Shipwrecks in deep water are often found by their surface expressions, such as exposed ceramic containers. Fully investigating or excavating those sites, however, requires understanding what is buried beneath, including organic materials and the remains of ship structure. This paper lays out the archaeological and technical justification for a high-frequency, narrow-beam sub-bottom profiler. It describes an ultrasonic (150 kHz) device built to image local areas of the seafloor beneath the mud. The final section presents a data set collected with the instrument operating on the ROV JASON over an 8th-century B.C. shipwreck found off the coast of Israel. Precise sub-bottom imagery can aid in characterizing a site before excavation, and enables a three-dimensional computer model of a buried structure to be built with acoustic techniques, without ever disturbing a wreck
Keywords :
archaeology; buried object detection; ships; sonar detection; sonar imaging; 150 kHz; Israel; archaeological applications; buried structure; high-frequency narrow-beam sub bottom profiler; seafloor; ship structure; shipwrecks; sub-bottom imagery three dimensional computer model; ultrasonic device; Ceramics; Containers; Instruments; Marine technology; Marine vehicles; Sea floor; Sea surface; Shape; Testing; Underwater vehicles;
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS, 2001. MTS/IEEE Conference and Exhibition
Conference_Location :
Honolulu, HI
Print_ISBN :
0-933957-28-9
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANS.2001.968326