Hi Frank,

Apologies for the late reply, only just catching up on some mailing lists.

QGIS is used extensively in UK commercial archaeology, thanks to ESRIs high 
prices and our low profits. Unfortunately most commercial units are quite 
secretive about their use and there's not a lot of collaboration or knowledge 
sharing going on.

At my previous employer, L-P Archaeology, we used QGIS extensively within the 
full recording process. I built a set of open source plugins that integrated 
into our field recording and post-ex analysis processes, linking out to our ARK 
recording database. We used it on some very large projects including a section 
of HS2. We were planning to migrate it to using GeoPackages and Mergin with 
sync to Postgres, but sadly we were taken over by another company who run ESRI 
so it was shut down. I suspect if we had continued, we might have switched to 
use QField due to their addition of plugin support which would have allowed us 
to write a fully custom frontend as well.

Currently I know of at least 2 other companies who use it for at least part of 
their daily field recording process using Mergin. One I believe has a full 
trench recording process for field staff that then syncs back to their central 
database, and the other seems to be using it for things like context sheets etc.

Sorry I can't give too much more details, but hopefully it shows that QGIS is 
up to the task.

John.


John Layt (He/Him) | Head of Digital Innovation | 07355 093513 | 
[email protected]
 MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) | 46 Eagle Wharf Road | London | N1 7ED  | 
www.mola.org.uk
 
MOLA is a company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales, company 
registration number 07751831, charity registration number 1143574. Registered 
office: Mortimer Wheeler House, 46 Eagle Wharf Road, London N1 7ED. MOLA is 
registered as an organisation with the Chartered Institute for Archaeologists.
​
For information on how we use your data please see our Privacy Notice
PBefore printing, please think about the environment
________________________________
From: QGIS-User <[email protected]> on behalf of Herrmann, 
Frank via QGIS-User <[email protected]>
Sent: 28 November 2025 13:37
To: '[email protected]' <[email protected]>
Subject: [Qgis-user] Question: Using QGIS for archaeological documentation 
workflows

This Message originated outside your organisation.

Dear all,

I hope you are doing well.

My name is Frank Herrmann and I work in the archaeological documentation unit 
of a German heritage institution (LWL-Archäologie für Westfalen).
We are currently evaluating to what extent QGIS can be used not only for GIS 
mapping, but also in workflows that involve structured excavation and find data.

Before making internal decisions, we would like to learn from the experience of 
the QGIS community, especially from people who have used QGIS in archaeological 
or heritage-related projects.

I would be very grateful for any insights on the following questions:

Do you use QGIS only as a GIS client, or have you also used it for 
documentation/database-like workflows in archaeology or cultural heritage?

Are there known limitations when using QGIS for long-term excavation 
documentation, metadata management or multi-user environments?

Do you have recommendations for combining QGIS with external databases (e.g., 
PostgreSQL/PostGIS, SQLite/Geopackage)?

Are there examples of archaeological projects where QGIS has been used 
successfully for both spatial and non-spatial documentation?

Any short response, experience, or recommendation would be extremely helpful 
for us.

Thank you very much in advance for your time - I truly appreciate your support.

Best regards,
Frank Herrmann
LWL-Archäologie für Westfalen
Germany

LWL-Archäologie für Westfalen
Referat Mittelalter
An den Speichern 7
48157 Münster
Telefon: 0251 591-8950
eMail: [email protected]

Besuchen Sie uns im Internet:
https://www.lwl-kaiserpfalz-paderborn.de/de/museum/sonderausstellungen/775-Westfalen-die-Ausstellung/<https://url.uk.m.mimecastprotect.com/s/F1_0CjYpGunM03JC1tRCmsY9B?domain=lwl-kaiserpfalz-paderborn.de>
www.lwl-archaeologie.de<https://url.uk.m.mimecastprotect.com/s/e1aHCk2qJTO6vr0H8uRCG3maE?domain=lwl-archaeologie.de>


Der LWL im Überblick:
Der Landschaftsverband Westfalen-Lippe (LWL) arbeitet als Kommunalverband mit 
mehr als 20.000 Beschäftigten für die 8,4 Millionen Menschen in der Region. Der 
LWL betreibt 35 Förderschulen, 21 Krankenhäuser, 18 Museen, zwei 
Besucherzentren und ist einer der größten deutschen Hilfezahler für Menschen 
mit Behinderung. Er erfüllt damit Aufgaben im sozialen Bereich, in der 
Behinderten- und Jugendhilfe, in der Psychiatrie und in der Kultur, die 
sinnvollerweise westfalenweit wahrgenommen werden. Ebenso engagiert er sich für 
eine inklusive Gesellschaft in allen Lebensbereichen. Die neun kreisfreien 
Städte und 18 Kreise in Westfalen-Lippe sind die Mitglieder des LWL. Sie tragen 
und finanzieren den Landschaftsverband, dessen Aufgaben ein Parlament mit 125 
Mitgliedern aus den westfälischen Kommunen gestaltet.

Der LWL auf Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/LWL2.0<https://url.uk.m.mimecastprotect.com/s/yWB5ClRrKc25lAKCVC8Czq_Qw?domain=facebook.com>
_______________________________________________
QGIS-User mailing list
[email protected]
List info: 
https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-user<https://url.uk.m.mimecastprotect.com/s/M_BhCmqvLtjKqAYU3FECROTbF?domain=lists.osgeo.org>
Unsubscribe: 
https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-user<https://url.uk.m.mimecastprotect.com/s/M_BhCmqvLtjKqAYU3FECROTbF?domain=lists.osgeo.org>
_______________________________________________
QGIS-User mailing list
[email protected]
List info: https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-user
Unsubscribe: https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-user

Reply via email to