Title :
New archaeological uses of autonomous underwater vehicles
Author :
Mindell, David ; Bingham, Brian
Author_Institution :
Deep Sea Archaeology Res. Group, MIT, MA, USA
Abstract :
This paper explores the intersection of two fields of research: autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs), and archaeology in the deep sea. Archaeology in the deep sea poses a range of difficult, interesting problems for autonomous underwater vehicles. These include broad area sonar searches, target identification, and precision survey. Broad area sonar searches for archaeology have requirements similar to those in other AUV applications collecting sonar data to locate targets for further inspection. The authors briefly discuss what existing vehicles can contribute to archaeological searches. They then describe the challenges for AUVs in identifying archaeological sites. Then, they discuss the importance of precision survey of archaeological sites and its implications for vehicle design and control. By "mowing the lawn" with computer-controlled tracklines over an archaeological site, an AUV could collect imagery and sonar data for precise maps of a particular site. We propose an archaeology-speciflc AUV to conduct such surveys and describe the requirements for such a vehicle to work in precision, instrumented environments
Keywords :
archaeology; geophysical equipment; geophysical techniques; oceanographic equipment; oceanographic techniques; remotely operated vehicles; underwater vehicles; AUV; archaeology; archeology; autonomous underwater vehicle; dep sea; exploration; measurement technique; ocean; precision survey; seafloor; searches; sonar; target identification; Humans; Inspection; Instruments; Marine vehicles; Remotely operated vehicles; Sea measurements; Sonar applications; Terrain mapping; Underwater tracking; 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.2001.968781