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Site formation processes of submerged shipwrecks /edited by Matthew E. Keith.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Gainesville : University Press of Florida, (c)2016.Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780813055695
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • G525 .S584 2016
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Ian Oxley and Matthew E. Keith -- Natural processes -- Coastal and inland geologic and geomorphic processes / Ben Ford, Carrie Sowden, Katherine Farnsworth, and M. Scott Harris -- Sediment and site formation in the marine environment / Matthew E. Keith and Amanda M. Evans -- Marine scour of cohesionless sediments / Rory Quinn, Robin Saunders, Ruth Plets, Kieran Westley, and Justin Dix -- Corrosion products and site formation processes / Ian D. MacLeod -- Degradation of wood / David Gregory -- Cultural processes -- Anthropogenic impacts of development-led archaeology in an offshore context / Amanda M. Evans and Antony Firth -- Quantifying impacts of trawling to shipwrecks / Michael L. Brennan -- Cultural site formation processes affecting shipwrecks and shipping mishap sites / Martin Gibbs and Brad Duncan -- Site formation and heritage management -- English heritage and shipwreck site formation processes / Ian Oxley -- Acoustic positioning and site formation on deep-water World War II shipwrecks in the Gulf of Mexico / Daniel J. Warren -- The U-166 and Robert E. Lee Battlefield: the equation of site distribution / Robert A. Church -- Conclusion / Matthew E. Keith.
Subject: Matthew Keith and the contributors to this volume provide a series of studies that examine the ways to identify the natural and anthropogenic processes that shape shipwreck site formation. The volume also showcases emerging technologies and methods by which archaeologists study shipwreck sites, including computer modeling and site reconstruction, as well as how human activities such as trawl fishing affect shipwreck sites.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number URL Status Date due Barcode
Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) G. Allen Fleece Library ONLINE Non-fiction G525 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Available ocn930269833

Includes bibliographies and index.

Introduction: Site formation processes of submerged shipwrecks / Ian Oxley and Matthew E. Keith -- Natural processes -- Coastal and inland geologic and geomorphic processes / Ben Ford, Carrie Sowden, Katherine Farnsworth, and M. Scott Harris -- Sediment and site formation in the marine environment / Matthew E. Keith and Amanda M. Evans -- Marine scour of cohesionless sediments / Rory Quinn, Robin Saunders, Ruth Plets, Kieran Westley, and Justin Dix -- Corrosion products and site formation processes / Ian D. MacLeod -- Degradation of wood / David Gregory -- Cultural processes -- Anthropogenic impacts of development-led archaeology in an offshore context / Amanda M. Evans and Antony Firth -- Quantifying impacts of trawling to shipwrecks / Michael L. Brennan -- Cultural site formation processes affecting shipwrecks and shipping mishap sites / Martin Gibbs and Brad Duncan -- Site formation and heritage management -- English heritage and shipwreck site formation processes / Ian Oxley -- Acoustic positioning and site formation on deep-water World War II shipwrecks in the Gulf of Mexico / Daniel J. Warren -- The U-166 and Robert E. Lee Battlefield: the equation of site distribution / Robert A. Church -- Conclusion / Matthew E. Keith.

Matthew Keith and the contributors to this volume provide a series of studies that examine the ways to identify the natural and anthropogenic processes that shape shipwreck site formation. The volume also showcases emerging technologies and methods by which archaeologists study shipwreck sites, including computer modeling and site reconstruction, as well as how human activities such as trawl fishing affect shipwreck sites.

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