ABSTRACT

This paper focuses on the use of LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) data for the study of rural landscapes in the context of regional archaeological analyses. In particular, we concentrate on using LiDAR to highlight the importance of activities other than habitation, as well as the use of areas outside the modern ploughzone. It has frequently been said that one of the major challenges to archaeological landscape survey is the incorporation of uplands, marshes, forests and other areas we term ‘outside the ploughzone’. Such areas are normally surveyed primarily through fieldwalking, but we suggest that LiDAR may make a significant contribution, although there are serious practical and methodological problems to overcome. Further, we argue that including these areas will alter the overall picture of rural landscapes in unexpected ways. The potential and challenges of integrating these areas and activities into landscape and regional scale research are sketched in this paper. We use a recent LiDAR survey as a case study to explore these issues. The project was funded by the Regional Council of the Franche-Comte for the LIEPPEC project, led by the USR 3124 and LEA ModeLTER, and is based in the hinterland of Besancon, Doubs, France.

The area surrounding Besancon is now largely forested, resulting in a dependence on the interpretation of the LiDAR model to guide field prospection. This paper provides some early results from the Forrêt de Chailluz, north of Besançon; we use LiDAR to refocus the picture from one dominated by questions of settlement, settlement patterns and agriculture to one incorporating questions about complex networks of sites and activities, distributed across a wider range of landscape contexts. Using these initial results, we reflect on how LiDAR survey fits into the dynamic area of survey, landscape and regional archaeology.