Dear All Apologies if the following betrays any naive assumptions but I would be grateful for the advice nonetheless.
I am looking to do some block kriging on a pottery counts from an archaeological survey covering the whole surface of an island (ca. 20sq.km, for details see www.ucl.ac.uk/asp). The blocks are far from ideal in being <100m long transects (without consistent orientation and ca. 2m wide), walked by archaeological surveyors spaced 15m apart. At first glance, variogram-fitting and kriging prediction based on such blocks does seem possible using gstat, but before looking more closely, my initial concern is more theoretical (a type of question I hope is still of interest to this list?). The pottery densities are highly skewed towards low values and a few high ones, to the extent that a natural log transform (after adding 1 to adjust zero values) still leaves a heavily skewed distribution. There is probably a sampling effect in here at the low end as true zero values are over-represented (i.e. the observed zero values disguise a range of low potsherd intensities that would be identifiable if surveyors were to look over a longer observation period). In contrast, a log transform of all non-zero values does a reasonable job of deskewing the data, but I feel it would be deceptive to ignore the zero values in this manner. Can anyone suggest an appropriate way forward, and perhaps also offer any previous experience with irregular block kriging with gstat (I have looked through the archives and found only a couple of inconclusive threads)? with thanks in advance Andy Andrew Bevan Lecturer UCL Institute of Archaeology 31-34 Gordon Square London WC1H 0PY tel: +44 (0)20 7679 1528 (internal 21528) info: www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/staff/profiles/bevan [[alternative HTML version deleted]] _______________________________________________ R-sig-Geo mailing list R-sig-Geo@stat.math.ethz.ch https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-sig-geo