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Researchers Investigate Down-Hole Magnetic Imaging

Over the past decade, NCPTT has funded a number of groundbreaking projects investigating minimally invasive methods of surveying archeological sites. The latest project, down-hole magnetic susceptibility imaging, is actually an outgrowth of one that was funded by a 1997 PTTGrant.

“The original NCPTT grant supported the development of a prototype down-hole magnetic susceptibility logger for archeological application,” said Rinita Dalan, an assistant professor at Minnesota State University Moorhead and principal investigator for the project.

“The most recent PTTGrant developed a methodology for the application of a commercial version of this instrument so that it can be effectively employed to detect and investigate buried archeological sites.”

Bartington Instruments, a company in the United Kingdom, is marketing a commercial version of the down-hole magnetic susceptibility instrument. A Major Research Instrumentation (MRI) Grant from the National Science Foundation supported development through a partnership established between Bartington Instruments and Dalan.

“My role was to provide design suggestions and evaluate, through field and lab trials, prototype versions of their instrument,” Dalan said. “Now that this technology is available for use in archeology, I thought that the NCPTT would be interested in seeing it effectively integrated in archeological use. This tool will provide a much-needed alternative to traditional methods for the discovery and exploration of buried cultural deposits.”

The instrument provides a new avenue for the resolution of fine-scale layering with depth and for the identification of ancient land surfaces and cultural layers. It provides a rapid, cost-effective, and relatively non-invasive means of identifying and exploring buried cultural resources.

Dalan sees potential to expand the application of this instrument to other archeological questions besides research on buried archeological properties. For example, she plans to develop a program for confirming and interpreting anomalies identified on the basis of surface geophysical surveys, using the down-hole susceptibility logger.

She also believes this project has fundamental significance to the field of archeology. As buried cultural resources become increasingly threatened, the need to document them also increases. But they must first be located.

“It is imperative that we develop effective methods to locate buried sites and that we forward these approaches for use within the archeological community,” Dalan said. “This project establishes an approach suitable for a wide variety of environments that is cost-effective, efficient, and relatively non-invasive.”

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Updated: Thursday, April 19, 2007
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