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Much of human history can be traced through the impacts of human actions upon 
the environment. The use of remote sensing technology offers the archeologist 
the opportunity to detect these impacts which are often invisible to the naked 
eye. This information can be used to address issues in human settlement, 
environmental interaction, and climate change. Archeologists want to know how 
ancient people successfully adapted to their environment and what factors may 
have led to their collapse or disappearance. Did they overextend the capacity 
of their landscape, causing destructive environmental effects which led to 
their demise? Can this information be applied to modern day societies so that 
the mistakes of the past are not repeated?

Remote sensing can be used as a methodological procedure for detecting, 
inventorying, and prioritizing surface and shallow-depth archeological 
information in a rapid, accurate, and quantified manner. Man is a tropical 
creature who has invaded every environment on earth successfully; now we are 
ready to explore, and eventually colonize, the delicate environments of Space. 
Understanding how ancient man successfully managed Earth is important for the 
success of current and future societies. 



  "The stereotype has archaeologists just digging up spearheads and pottery and 
anthropologists just writing down the words of primitive tribes. But we're 
examining how people adapted to their environment throughout time, how they 
experienced environmental shift, why cultures come and go. Soils associated 
with artifacts are as important as the artifacts themselves--probably more 
relevant to us than the actual objects. Now more than ever, archaeological 
research is interdisciplinary: botany, forestry, soil science, hydrology--all 
of which contribute to a more complete understanding of the earth, climatic 
shifts, and how people adapt to large regions. This understanding is critical 
to future decision making affecting the planet.

  In Costa Rica, the culture survived repeated volcanic explosions that 
repeatedly destroyed the environment, explosions equal to the force of a 
nuclear blast. Other cultures, like the advanced Maya societies, did not 
survive or recover from similar eruptions. Did it have to do with the size and 
violence of the eruption, the way they farmed their land over time, or 
territorial and political struggle?" *




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Responsible Official: Dr. William M. Lapenta ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) 
Page Author: Tom Sever 
Page Curator: Diane Samuelson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) 

http://weather.msfc.nasa.gov/archeology/


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