Aeroarcheologie – výzkum havarovaných letounů
Files
Date issued
2010
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Západočeská univerzita v Plzni
Abstract
The article focuses on aviation archaeology, i.e. the study of crashed plane sites. In the
first part there is described the emergence of the discipline in the Great Britain, its development
and the attitude of official institutions as well as the public towards the activities of
the largely amateur researchers. This is followed by the description of the situation in the
rest of the world and the emergence of the search for crashed planes in Czechoslovakia,
which was largely determined by the political situation. This gave advantage to the planes
from the former USSR, the research of the remains of planes from other countries being
practically forbidden. A great change took place in 1989 with the fall of the communist
regime. The second part of the article then deals with the definition of aviation archaeology
and the aims of such research. These can be summed up in four main points – the
search for missing pilots, the search for planes and events, the research on the construction
of planes and their equipment and finally the search for planes about which there is no
other record than the remains in the ground themselves. Whilst for the first two points
archaeology is but a means for the recovery of new information or confirmation of the existing
ones, the latter two points pose their own questions. In any case, there is always
present the problem of relationships between the professional and amateur researchers.
Description
Subject(s)
aeroarcheologie, havarované letouny, archeologický výzkum, 20. století
Citation
Acta Fakulty filozofické Západočeské univerzity v Plzni. 2010, č. 4, s. 249-265.