Abstract
Sara Fairén-Jiménez
British Neolithic Rock Art in its Landscape
Journal of Field Archaeology 32 (2007) 283--295
Studing the relationship of rock art to its landscape context can
contribute to a better understanding of how it was used. This paper
discusses the methods of the study of open-air rock art, using as a case
study the Neolithic rock art from the county of Northumberland (northern
England). A GIS analysis is employed with three primary objectives: to
create a systematic and objective description of the landscape in which
these rock art sites are located, to identify trends and recurrences in
the location of rock art sites in relation to distinctive landscape
features, and to explore the association of rock art sites with other
components of the landscape in terms of intervisibility and movement.
Preliminary results of this analysis indicate that variables such as
relative elevation and slope were significant in the placement of rock
art in Northumberland, and rock art panels appear to have been located
to maximize visibility from natural routes of movement between uplands
and lowlands.
Volume 32 Number 3 (Fall 2007)
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