Academic literature on the topic 'Trame parcellaire'
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Journal articles on the topic "Trame parcellaire"
Robert, Benoît. "Les cultures légumières de la Côte de Beauport : leurs liens avec la structure agraire et l’urbanisation." Cahiers de géographie du Québec 16, no. 37 (April 12, 2005): 31–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/021019ar.
Full textClotuche, Raphaël. "L’agglomération de Fanum Martis (Famars) et son territoire." Revue du Nord Tome 104, no. 3 (September 20, 2023): 53–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rdn.447.0053.
Full textMartín Gutiérrez, Emilio. "Reseña a: GÉRARD CHOUQUER, LES PARCELLAIRES MEDIEVAUX EN EMILIE ET EN ROMAGNE. CENTURIATIONS ET TRAMES COAXIALES. MORPHOLOGIE ET DROIT AGRAIRES, PARÍS 2015, 330 p." RIPARIA 2 (2016): 153–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.25267/riparia.2016.v2.08.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Trame parcellaire"
Le, Voguer Nathanaël. "La fabrique des paysages agraires en région Centre-Val de Loire dans la longue durée." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Tours, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024TOUR2006.
Full textThe Centre-Val de Loire region of France is characterised by a variety of landscapes and ground occupation methods (cereal fields of Beauce and Champagne Berrichonne, wetlands of Sologne and Brenne, wine valleys...) The goal of this PhD thesis is to understand the making of these landscapes and to identify points of likeliness and differences both spatially and historically between the different historical _pays_ that are part of the region. Since the beginning of the 2000's, the development of LiDAR acquisitions (Light Detection and Ranging) opened the way to new methods of spatial analysis concerning landscapes and the societies that made them.The thesis corpus is composed essentially of agrarian microreliefs, seen thanks to a Digital Terrain Model (DTM) created by the IGN (National Institute for Geographical Information and Forestry) and available through the « Référentiel à Grande Echelle Alti ». The identification of these microreliefs was done at regional scale to understand the types of landscapes that they represent. This first scale of analysis highlighted the conservation of many archaeological remains in the whole region, under the forests as well as in open and cultivated landscapes: headlands, terraces, embankments and slope breaks.Secondly, almost 100 000 structures were vectorised inside the area with the highest density of structures, to make a more refined study of this space that covers the Beauce and the western Gâtinais and which extends on almost 600 square kilometres between the rivers of the Loire, the Loing, the Loir and the Eure, and the regional limits in the north. A diachronical approach was chosen to analyse the structures in the long term, as they can be formed as soon as ploughing tools are used, which is since Protohistory, and can still be used as field-limits today. The study was focused on two main variables that are used to characterise these structures, their morphology and their direction. For the morphology, the use of multivariate statistical tools, a Principal Component Analysis and a Hierarchical Ascending Classification allowed to identify several classes present in the whole area, and especially one class corresponding mostly of ancient roads (from Roman, Medieval, Modern and Contemporary eras). For the direction, circular statistical tools were used to measure the homogeneity of areas and to identify diverging axes, by comparison to the general direction. Finally, these results were put into context by comparing them to historical and archaeological data, especially from rescue archaeology, mostly settlements or field-bounding ditches.Thanks to this analysis, several formation networks covering dozens of square kilometres were identified inside Beauce and western Gâtinais which, for some of them, could have an Iron Age origin. These networks, thanks to field boundaries and roads, maintained themselves into the landscape for more than 2000 years, until the transformations of the middle of the 20th century. Theses new results are used to enrich the history of the _openfield_. From the point of view of the field networks and of the cultivation work, Middle Ages and the _openfield_ regime appear as a transformation of the landscape but in continuity with previous landscapes and networks. Therefore, without dismissing the existence of local modifications visible at a bigger scale, it is the resiliency that can be put forward as the central element of landscapes with a transmission of field structures in the long term
Book chapters on the topic "Trame parcellaire"
Thiard, Philippe. "La trame parcellaire, frein ou levier du projet urbain ?" In La parcelle dans tous ses états, 153–70. Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pur.164932.
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