Archaeology Underwater: The NAS Guide to Principles and Practice

(Barry) #1

xii LIST OFPLATES


14.1 Using vertical offsets to record hull profile
14.2 Underwater survey: diver with
drawing board
14.3 A clinometer in use
14.4 A double-strung drawing/planning
frame in use
14.5 Drawing/planning frames being used
vertically to record vessel remains
on the foreshore
14.6 A screen-shot showing Site Recorder
in use on the Mary Rose(1545) site
15.1 Underwater excavation with an airlift
15.2 Excavating with a water-dredge in less
than 5 m (16 ft) of water in Dor, Israel
15.3 Underwater excavation with a
water-dredge
16.1 The effects of uncontrolled drying of
organic material – samples of oak
from the Mary Rose(1545)
16.2 A gun carriage is lowered into a temporary
polythene-lined tank pending dispatch Ω
to the conservation laboratory
16.3 The base of a wooden gun carriage being
prepared for lifting
16.4 A batch of objects being prepared for
transport to the laboratory

17.1 A current gauge on the Duart Point (1653)
wreck, Mull, Scotland
17.2 Monitoring of the underwater environment
on the Mary Rose(1545) wreck using
an RBR data-logger
17.3 Oak blocks placed on the Mary Rose
wreck-site to study the activity of
marine wood-boring animals
17.4 A conservator attaches an aluminium
anode to an iron gun on the Duart
Point (1653) wreck, Mull, Scotland
20.1 Public outreach: children learning
about underwater archaeology
20.2 Opportunities for publishing archaeological
work, both electronically and in hard copy
A1.1 A one-hole stone anchor found at
Chapman’s Pool, Dorset, UK
A1.2 A two-hole stone anchor found near
Golden Cap, Dorset, UK
A3.1 Divers practise underwater survey
techniques during a NAS Part I course
A3.2 Obtaining samples for dendrochronological
dating during a NAS Part III course
A3.3 Excavation and survey during a NAS
Training project on the foreshore
near Bristol, UK

9781405175913_1_pre.qxd 5/7/08 6:24 PM Page xii

Free download pdf