At the water’s edge: photogrammetry in extreme shallow water environments
At the water’s edge: photogrammetry in extreme shallow water environments
Coastal, riverine, and lacustrine environments have played a central role in the development of human societies. Locating and documenting this record of activity in shallow-water environments has, however, proven difficult. Terrestrial survey methods reach their limit at the water’s edge, and marine geophysical methods often struggle with shallow depths. This zone, dubbed the ‘white ribbon’ due to the absence of data, thus represents a longstanding methodological gap. Recent research on archaeological islands in Scotland, more commonly known as crannogs, has underscored these difficulties while also offering insights and practical solutions.
This paper presents a high-resolution, repeatable photogrammetric workflow designed to integrate extreme shallow-water (< 1 m) and aerial surveys. It employs stereoscopic photogrammetry to generate artificial scale bars and RTK-GPS control points to enable data integration. By adapting standard terrestrial and underwater survey methods we were able to develop a cost-effective, repeatable and accurate solution to recording sites that straddle the water’s edge. The results not only advance the study of crannogs but also establish a replicable framework for investigating other challenging littoral environments, particularly inland lakes and rivers where tidal exposure cannot be relied upon.
Blankshein, Stephanie
5e381628-abca-4861-815e-837d1f8ed5ff
Pedrotti, Felix
fdf5db67-2529-4152-afbe-2801fed48cd1
Sturt, Fraser
442e14e1-136f-4159-bd8e-b002bf6b95f6
Garrow, Duncan
516e3fea-51bf-4452-85f3-cd1bc0da68c6
Blankshein, Stephanie
5e381628-abca-4861-815e-837d1f8ed5ff
Pedrotti, Felix
fdf5db67-2529-4152-afbe-2801fed48cd1
Sturt, Fraser
442e14e1-136f-4159-bd8e-b002bf6b95f6
Garrow, Duncan
516e3fea-51bf-4452-85f3-cd1bc0da68c6
Blankshein, Stephanie, Pedrotti, Felix, Sturt, Fraser and Garrow, Duncan
(2025)
At the water’s edge: photogrammetry in extreme shallow water environments.
Advances in Archaeological Practice.
(In Press)
Abstract
Coastal, riverine, and lacustrine environments have played a central role in the development of human societies. Locating and documenting this record of activity in shallow-water environments has, however, proven difficult. Terrestrial survey methods reach their limit at the water’s edge, and marine geophysical methods often struggle with shallow depths. This zone, dubbed the ‘white ribbon’ due to the absence of data, thus represents a longstanding methodological gap. Recent research on archaeological islands in Scotland, more commonly known as crannogs, has underscored these difficulties while also offering insights and practical solutions.
This paper presents a high-resolution, repeatable photogrammetric workflow designed to integrate extreme shallow-water (< 1 m) and aerial surveys. It employs stereoscopic photogrammetry to generate artificial scale bars and RTK-GPS control points to enable data integration. By adapting standard terrestrial and underwater survey methods we were able to develop a cost-effective, repeatable and accurate solution to recording sites that straddle the water’s edge. The results not only advance the study of crannogs but also establish a replicable framework for investigating other challenging littoral environments, particularly inland lakes and rivers where tidal exposure cannot be relied upon.
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Accepted/In Press date: 9 September 2025
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 509449
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509449
ISSN: 2326-3768
PURE UUID: 627c99c1-d19a-4838-af7c-8adebf424658
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Date deposited: 23 Feb 2026 17:46
Last modified: 24 Feb 2026 03:01
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Contributors
Author:
Felix Pedrotti
Author:
Duncan Garrow
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