Abstract
Measures of potential sailing mobility are essential for understanding the functioning of ancient maritime links. This requires measuring potential sailing mobility of coastal sailing runs, as well as direct passages in the open sea. Quantitative works attempting to measure potential sailing mobility have shortcomings related to the use of averaged wind data, thereby losing knowledge of wind variability; non-inclusion of the human factors impacting mobility; and not using methods of measuring coastal sailing. The method presented here was developed to measure potential sailing mobility of coastal sailing runs, based on using the patterns of hourly wind direction and speed variability – and specifically the coastal breeze cycle. The effects of wind variability on sailing mobility are extracted from a large dataset of data at high spatiotemporal resolution, by employing millions of sailing simulations which enable developing meaningful information from big data. This method has demonstrated its applicability to measuring coastal sailing mobility in several developmental case studies in the eastern Mediterranean, introducing realistic measures of mobility that include coefficients of mobility and of time spent waiting for favourable winds. Complementing a previously developed method to measure potential sailing mobility on direct open-sea passages, this new method can now provide a comprehensive toolkit for mapping potential sailing mobility. Such mapping is a valuable input to research on maritime networks and maritime-related developments.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 105500 |
Journal | Journal of Archaeological Science |
Volume | 136 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Dec 2021 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:The authors thank the two anonymous reviewers whose inputs have contributed to the clarity and focus of this paper. The authors thank the Data Science Research Centre (DSRC) of the University of Haifa for providing a seed grant to develop a high-resolution reanalysis database of coastal winds for the central and eastern Mediterranean basins. This database is essential for application of the method and may also serve a wider research public. The authors also thank John B. Tresman for the English editing. Above all the authors thank the crew of the Ma'agan Mikhael II for pre-dawn gatherings to catch the morning breeze.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier Ltd
Keywords
- Ancient sailing routes
- Breeze-assisted sailing
- Cabotage
- Coastal sailing
- Experimental archaeology
- Maritime links
- Mediterranean
- Weather-routing
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Archaeology
- Archaeology