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Title: The basics of least cost analysis for archaeological applications

Journal Article · · Advances in Archaeological Practice
 [1]
  1. Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), Oak Ridge, TN (United States

Here we report that Least Cost Analysis (LCA) is a geospatially focused quantitative approach that can help archaeologists better understand how people may have moved across a landscape. At its core is the assumption that humans make decisions about movement as fully rational actors with complete knowledge of the landscape, attempting to minimize the cost of that movement as they travel from one location to another. LCA is most often used to construct a small number of hypothetical routes between locations of interest and, when used effectively, can even lead to the creation of entire transportation networks. Desktop GIS software packages, both commercial and open source, make running LCA relatively straightforward, but that does not necessarily mean that the output is informative or accurate. The following tutorial is designed to expose the reader to the foundational steps required to complete an LCA workflow, along with the scientific rationale behind each step and how to avoid potential pitfalls that one might run into along the way. Finally, relevant literature is cited throughout the tutorial in order to provide context for the technical methods that underpin available tools, to suggest various ways that LCA can be used to solve archaeological problems, and to show the art of the possible.

Research Organization:
Oak Ridge National Lab. (ORNL), Oak Ridge, TN (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
Grant/Contract Number:
AC05-00OR22725
OSTI ID:
1311302
Journal Information:
Advances in Archaeological Practice, Vol. 3, Issue 4; ISSN 2326-3768
Publisher:
Soceity for American Archaeology - IngentaCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

References (9)

Multiple pathways across past landscapes: circuit theory as a complementary geospatial method to least cost path for modeling past movement journal October 2011
Least-cost paths in mountainous terrain journal April 2004
Order in movement: a GIS approach to accessibility journal April 2011
“Dotting the joins”: a non-reconstructive use of Least Cost Paths to approach ancient roads. The case of the Roman roads in the NW Iberian Peninsula journal February 2015
Geospatial modeling of pedestrian transportation networks: a case study from precolumbian Oaxaca, Mexico journal August 2012
A note on two problems in connexion with graphs journal December 1959
Applying Circuit Theory for Corridor Expansion and Management at Regional Scales: Tiling, Pinch Points, and Omnidirectional Connectivity journal January 2014
The development of integrated terrestrial and marine pathways in the Argo-Saronic region, Greece journal April 2014
Scaling of contact networks for epidemic spreading in urban transit systems journal February 2021

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