Geographic Information Systems

The rapid uptake of computational methods in archaeology such as Geographical Information Systems (GIS), from the late 1980s and early 90s, was relatively precocious for a social science discipline and brought an order of magnitude shift in the quantities of spatial data that could be managed and analysed. My interests in this topic are often at the landscape scale, but are fairly wide-ranging (see publications list). Along with Mark Lake, I co-teach a range of Masters courses associated with the MSc in GIS Spatial Analysis in Archaeology.