GPR Remote Sensing in Archaeology provides a complete description of
the processes needed to take raw GPR data all the way to the
construction of subsurface images. The book provides an introduction to
the "theory" of GPR by using a simulator that shows how radar profiles
across simple model structures look and provides many examples so that
the complexity of radar signatures can be understood. It continues with
a review of the necessary radargram signal processes needed along with
examples. The most comprehensive methodology to construct subsurface
images from either coarsely spaced data using interpolation or from
dense data from multi-channel equipment and 3D volume generation is
presented, advanced imaging solutions such as overlay analysis are
introduced, and numerous worldwide site case histories are shown. The
authors present their studies in a way that most technical and
non-technical users of the equipment will find essentials for
implementing in their own subsurface investigations.