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Data archaeology helps builders avoid buried treasure

Finding a boat where you want to put your building can be costly. A data analytics start-up will help companies guess what's in the ground before they dig
Looks like we missed the boat
Looks like we missed the boat
(Image: Allan Tannenbaum/Polaris/eyevine)

IN 2010, when builders were excavating the site of the former World Trade Center in New York, they stumbled across something rather unusual: a large wooden boat, later dated to the 1700s.

Hitting archaeological remains is a familiar problem for builders, because the land they are excavating has often been in use for hundreds, if not thousands, of years.

, a UK data analytics start-up, wants to help companies guess what鈥檚 in the ground before they start digging. Using predictive algorithms, their new program maps where artefacts might still be found in England and Wales, in order to help companies avoid the time and cost of excavation. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an expensive problem to have once you鈥檝e started digging,鈥 says Geoff Roberts, CEO of Democrata.

Archaeological services can amount to between 1 and 3 per cent of contractors鈥 total construction cost. 鈥淲e wanted to bring data science in as an added tool, so humans involved in the process could use it to understand what would likely be found,鈥 says Roberts.

聯Archaeological services are generally between 1 and 3 per cent of the total construction cost聰

The Democrata team scoured documents from government departments such as the Forestry Commission, English Heritage and Land Registry to find out what the land was used for in the past, for example, and about known archaeological sites. This included 鈥済rey literature鈥, the massive set of unpublished reports written by contractors every year.

With the aid of a supercomputer, they developed models that can pinpoint where treasures are likely to be hidden underground. For instance, land close to water, tin mines or sites of religious significance was ranked more highly than land elsewhere. Other factors like the local geology, animal and plant life also contributed to the score.

This week, Democrata will present the program to engineering companies and the government to hear their feedback.

Henry Chapman at the University of Birmingham, UK, says the tool may impede new discoveries in archaeology. 鈥淚f you think about the number of archaeological fieldwork excavations that take place purely for trying to find out about the past, that鈥檚 a very small amount compared to all of the excavations done before commercial development,鈥 he says.