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Navigating the narrative: Integrating traditional knowledge and embodied practice within computational models of ancient seafaring

Navigating the narrative: Integrating traditional knowledge and embodied practice within computational models of ancient seafaring
Navigating the narrative: Integrating traditional knowledge and embodied practice within computational models of ancient seafaring
Why do people go to sea? The relationship people have with land and sea, maritime space, boats and ships are entwined and complex, shaped and molded by the marine environment, identity and heritage. This paper explores the complexity of people’s relationship with the sea to question how we can understand and model seafaring in the past, and how this can be used to better understand maritime heritage today. To be meaningful, computational analysis of seafaring must be tied into relevant known seafaring and navigation practice. Without this firm basis our statistical and hypothetical models lose the ability to measure past actions. However, there are many ways to ‘go to sea’ and seafaring practices do not start and end on the water itself. This paper reflects upon the process of seafaring, as it relates to our understanding of navigational knowledge, mobility in practice, seafaring as social action and the influences behind people’s desire to set sail. There is much we can learn from applied practices of seafaring, conducted both by practitioners and through efforts of experimental or experiential archaeology; understanding the complexity and nuance of the social aspects of seafaring guides the research questions that shape our models and shapes how we use and understand the outcomes derived from quantitative computational approaches.
Heritage, Navigation, Practice, Seafaring
1557-2285
579-600
Farr, Helen
4aba646f-b279-4d7a-8795-b0ae9e772fe9
Benoit Berard
Justin Leidwanger
Joseph Genz
Emma Slayton
Farr, Helen
4aba646f-b279-4d7a-8795-b0ae9e772fe9

Benoit Berard, Justin Leidwanger, Joseph Genz and Emma Slayton (2025) Navigating the narrative: Integrating traditional knowledge and embodied practice within computational models of ancient seafaring. Journal of Maritime Archaeology, 20 (3), 579-600. (doi:10.1007/s11457-025-09470-6).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Why do people go to sea? The relationship people have with land and sea, maritime space, boats and ships are entwined and complex, shaped and molded by the marine environment, identity and heritage. This paper explores the complexity of people’s relationship with the sea to question how we can understand and model seafaring in the past, and how this can be used to better understand maritime heritage today. To be meaningful, computational analysis of seafaring must be tied into relevant known seafaring and navigation practice. Without this firm basis our statistical and hypothetical models lose the ability to measure past actions. However, there are many ways to ‘go to sea’ and seafaring practices do not start and end on the water itself. This paper reflects upon the process of seafaring, as it relates to our understanding of navigational knowledge, mobility in practice, seafaring as social action and the influences behind people’s desire to set sail. There is much we can learn from applied practices of seafaring, conducted both by practitioners and through efforts of experimental or experiential archaeology; understanding the complexity and nuance of the social aspects of seafaring guides the research questions that shape our models and shapes how we use and understand the outcomes derived from quantitative computational approaches.

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Accepted/In Press date: 11 August 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 September 2025
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2025.
Keywords: Heritage, Navigation, Practice, Seafaring

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 506632
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506632
ISSN: 1557-2285
PURE UUID: cbaf38c1-8819-4084-95cf-630eea5b33bb
ORCID for Helen Farr: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7922-9179

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Date deposited: 12 Nov 2025 17:46
Last modified: 13 Nov 2025 02:42

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Contributors

Author: Helen Farr ORCID iD
Corporate Author: Benoit Berard
Corporate Author: Justin Leidwanger
Corporate Author: Joseph Genz
Corporate Author: Emma Slayton

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