TY - JOUR AB - FOR some years now air‐photography has been acknowledged as a most valuable accession to archaeological research. It has often been said, and with justice, that for the excavation of an ancient site an air‐photograph is practically a necessity. The reason for this is that, when seen from above, the plan of an archaeological site is revealed in a way which is impossible for an observer on the ground. The actual process differs according to the character of the ground itself. Ancient ruins consist either of earthworks, such as banks and ditches, or of foundations of masonry. In either case, the plan appears to a ground observer as a confused jumble that, when seen from above, is revealed for what it really is. Archaeologists have not many opportunities for flying themselves, at any rate in England, where this new branch of study originated and where it has been developed to a far greater extent than abroad. The pilot naturally has other things to think about when he is flying, and it has been suggested that a few words of explanation might be of interest to readers of Aircraft Engineering. There is a fine field here for the owner of a light aeroplane who might welcome some excuse for cross‐country flying, other than the obvious ones. Old England seen from the air is a book that has as yet only been half‐opened; there are still immense possibilities. In order to bring out some of the ways in which air‐photography works, I have described in this article a few typical air‐photographs of sites in Sussex. VL - 1 IS - 5 SN - 0002-2667 DO - 10.1108/eb029147 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/eb029147 AU - Crawford O.G.S. PY - 1929 Y1 - 1929/01/01 TI - Aiding Archæology from the Air: Photographs of Ancient Sussex Earthworks Illustrate Indispensability of Aircraft and Air Survey To The Excavator T2 - Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology PB - MCB UP Ltd SP - 166 EP - 168 Y2 - 2024/04/25 ER -