Has anyone started using 3D methods in archaeological geophysics? Some episodes (such as the fougou in Boliegh, Cornwall) seem to have similar challenges to what we see in exploration. I believe resistance was being used and a broad conductor was identified that turned out to be a pipe. The 3D methods we use now seem to be better at resolving features like this that could be generated by various models in the 2D methods.
Any comments?
Anyone in this forum see geochemical methods being used with archaeology? Are field portable XRF or IR Spectroscopy tools getting into the field?
Thanks for comments. I work more with the geochem, but I have worked on 3D geophysics in the past.