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Featured researches published by Mark Kincey.


Antiquity | 2008

Archaeological resource modelling in temperate river valleys: a case study from the Trent Valley, UK

Andy J. Howard; A.G. Brown; Christopher Carey; Keith Challis; Lyndon Cooper; Mark Kincey; Phil Toms

Methods for mapping and determining the condition of archaeological resources while they are still underground have been in development for nearly half a century. The authors here offer an example from the frontiers of the art: the application of a package of remote sensing procedures not only designed to locate sites but to model the valley deposits which contain and cover them. The variation in success of different methods in different deposits offers a guide to the design of evaluation projects on sand and gravel terrain everywhere.


The historic environment : policy & practice, 2015, Vol.6(1), pp.3-15 [Peer Reviewed Journal] | 2015

Preserving the Legacy of Historic Metal-Mining Industries in Light of the Water Framework Directive and Future Environmental Change in Mainland Britain: Challenges for the Heritage Community

Andy J. Howard; Mark Kincey; Christopher Carey

Abstract Contemporary global metal mining is a source of environmental pollution, but in Britain it is our historic mining industry that has left a legacy of contamination in the landscape, around both the immediate mine sites as well as within the river valley floors that drain these orefields. It has been estimated that the levels of lead and zinc stored within some northern British river systems represent values comparable to present-day reserves of economically viable ore deposits and exposure to them can be detrimental to human health. Despite the prevalence and significance of these deposits, they have been neglected by the cultural heritage community in favour of more easily interpretable remains such as mine buildings, technologies of ore procurement and processing, and the final products of manufacture. This paper argues that in light of future climate change and legislation associated with the European Union Water Framework Directive, heritage managers and industrial archaeologists have to start investigating these deposits as part of their studies and to engage with the environmental science and geomorphological communities who are, at present, setting the agenda in terms of strategies for pollution mitigation and landscape remediation.


Archaeological Prospection | 2011

A Generic Toolkit for the Visualization of Archaeological Features on Airborne LiDAR Elevation Data

Keith Challis; Paolo Forlin; Mark Kincey


Antiquity | 2008

Airborne lidar and historic environment records

Keith Challis; Ziga Kokalj; Mark Kincey; Derek Moscrop; Andy J. Howard


Archaeological Prospection | 2009

Airborne remote sensing of valley floor geoarchaeology using Daedalus ATM and CASI

Keith Challis; Mark Kincey; Andy J. Howard


Climatic Change | 2008

The impact of climate change on archaeological resources in Britain : a catchment scale assessment

Andy J. Howard; Keith Challis; Joseph Holden; Mark Kincey; Dg Passmore


Archaeological Prospection | 2011

Airborne lidar intensity and geoarchaeological prospection in river valley floors

Keith Challis; Christopher Carey; Mark Kincey; Andy J. Howard


Journal for Nature Conservation | 2010

Monitoring fragile upland landscapes: the application of airborne lidar.

Mark Kincey; Keith Challis


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2011

Assessing the preservation potential of temperate, lowland alluvial sediments using airborne lidar intensity

Keith Challis; Christopher Carey; Mark Kincey; Andy J. Howard


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2014

Assessing the changing condition of industrial archaeological remains on Alston Moor, UK, using multisensor remote sensing.

Mark Kincey; Lesley C. Batty; Henry Chapman; Benjamin R. Gearey; Stewart Ainsworth; Keith Challis

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Keith Challis

University of Birmingham

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