101 results
Search Results
2. Managing the Ongoing Impact of Colonialism on Mathematics Education
- Author
-
Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia (MERGA) and Owens, Kay
- Abstract
This paper is a brief summary of a large historic research project in Papua New Guinea (PNG). The project aimed to document and analyse the nature of mathematics education from tens of thousands of years ago to the present. Data sources varied from first contact and later records, archaeology, oral histories, language analyses, lived experiences, memoirs, government documents, field studies, and previous research especially doctoral studies. The impacts of colonisation, post-colonial aid and globalisation on mathematics education have been analysed and an understanding of the current status of mathematics education established as neocolonial. Managing neocolonial education policies may minimise the loss of cultural ways of thinking.
- Published
- 2023
3. Dine Baa Hane Bi Naaltsoos: Collected Papers from the Seventh through Tenth Navajo Studies Conferences.
- Author
-
Navajo Nation, Window Rock, AZ. Historic Preservation Dept. and Piper, June-el
- Abstract
This document contains 29 papers presented at the 7th-10th Navajo Studies Conferences, 1994-97. The papers are arranged in five sections: "Aesthetics: Rugs, Baskets, and Rock Art"; "Doing Anthropology"; "Health"; "Economics"; and "Contact between Cultures." The papers are: "The First Navajo Studies Conference: Reflections by the Cofounders" (Charlotte J. Frisbie, David M. Brugge); "Dine Interpretations of Navajo Rug Styles" (Kathleen Tabaha); "The Image Weavers: Contemporary Navajo Pictorial Textiles" (Susan Brown McGreevy); "Rock Art: Comparison of Navajo Realistic Style with Plains Biographical Style" (David M. Brugge); "The Storytellers: Contemporary Navajo Basket Makers" (Susan Brown McGreevy); "Navajos Learning and Doing Archaeology: NNAD's Student Training Program at Northern Arizona University" (Davina R. TwoBears); "Road Project Ethnography: Observations on the Role of the Anthropologist and the Cultural Specialist" (David O. Ortiz); "The Final Stages of a Life History Project" (Charlotte J. Frisbie, Augusta Sandoval); "The Landscape of a Life: Life History and the Archaeological Record" (Karen R. Benally, Paul F. Reed); "The Navajo Uranium Miner Oral History and Photography Project" (Doug Brugge et al); "The Trader and Navajo Culture Change" (Theodore R. Reinhart); "Structural Stabilization at Old Fort Ruin" (Larry L. Baker, Christopher L. Zeller); "Issues of Familial Support in the Management of Non-Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus" (Julia Roanhorse); "Lifestyle Changes among the Navajo: A Cause of Diabetes?" (Sonya Yazzie); "'They Need To Use Both Sides'" (Nelson Sims); "'I Have No Relatives': Navajo Narratives of Distress and Therapeutic Transformation" (Elizabeth Lewton, Thomas Csordas); "Family Dynamics in Three Generations of Navajo Women" (Joanne E. McCloskey); "Contemporary Navajo Wage Labor and Income Patterns" (Scott C. Russell); "Extraction or Reciprocation? Conflict over the Navajo Nation's Ponderosa Pine Forests" (Patrick Pynes); "The Silent Crisis: Economic Consequences of Multiple Appropriations of Navajo Weavers' Patterns and Production" (Kathy M'Closkey); "Navajo Land Use in the Early Twentieth Century" (Riitta Laitinen); "Hubbell Trading Post Today: A View of Working in a Trading Post" (Maralyn Yazzie); "Room To Trade: Space and the Navajo Trading Experience" (Laura R. Marcus); "Navajo Weavers as Artists: Individuals and Regional Styles" (Nancy Mahaney); "The Creation of a Usable Past" (Teresa J. Wilkins); "Museum Presentations of American Indians" (Mark Tomas Bahti); "Traditional and Academic Plant Study" (Kenneth J. Pratt); "The Navajo Great Gambler Legend: A Global Phenomenon" (Kathryn Gabriel); and "Atonement or Harmony: An Examination of The Beatitudes in Navajo Thought" (Peter Kakos). (Contains references in most papers, photographs, and contributor profiles.) (SV)
- Published
- 1999
4. IFLA General Conference, 1987. Division of Management and Technology. Conservation Section. Round Table on Audiovisual Media. Papers.
- Author
-
International Federation of Library Associations, The Hague (Netherlands).
- Abstract
The eight papers in this collection focus on the preservation of both print and nonprint library materials: (1) "Properties and Problems of Modern Papers" (D. J. Priest, United Kingdom); (2) "On the Origin of Papermaking in the Light of Scientific Research on Recent Archaeological Discoveries" (Jixing Pan, China); (3) "Researches in New Conservation Methods in the State Library of the Czech Socialist Republic-Prague and Their Effect" (J. Hanzlova, Czechoslovakia); (4) "On Terminology in the Field of Document Conservation. Some Problems" (Z. P. Dvoriashina, USSR); (5) "The Control of Insects in Libraries and Archives" (M. L. Cox, United Kingdom); (6) "FORMAT--Canada's Computerized Information System for Audiovisual Materials" (Donald Bidd, Canada); (7) "A Strategy for the Preservation of Audiovisual Materials" (Peter C. Mazikana, Zimbabwe); and (8) "Progress in the Preservation of Audiovisual Material" (Helen P. Harrison, United Kingdom). (CGD)
- Published
- 1987
5. Papers of The Seventh Algonquian Conference, 1975.
- Author
-
Carleton Univ., Ottawa (Ontario). and Cowan, William
- Abstract
This volume contains twenty-five of the papers presented at the Seventh Algonquian conference. Topics covered in the papers include recently discovered linguistic fragments of Ocanahowan, the Wittiko people, ethno-history and archeology of the Mushuan, color terms in Narragansett, the Christian holidays of the Wabanaki, dialects of the Eastern Ojibwa-Odawa, historic populations of northwestern Ontario, Cree myths, unspecified-subject phenomena in Algonquian, southern New England shamanism, the coding of role information in Ojibwa, physical anthropology in northwestern Ontario, Eastern Abnaki shamanism, the role of warfare among the Southern Algonquians, lexical symbolization and phonological processes in Delaware, a comparison of traditional Cree, acculturated Cree and Euro-Canadian values in children, Montagnais dialectology, the Proto-Algonquian Urheimat, developing an orthography for Micmac, territorial distribution of the Western Woods Cree, Algonquian languages in Indian education, style in social relationships, and the seventeenth-century Wabanaki Sagamores. (CLK)
- Published
- 1976
6. ICT Competence in Social Sciences: Designing Digital Resources for Teaching and Learning Cultural Heritage
- Author
-
Carrillo, Ana Luisa Martínez
- Abstract
Currently, the use of technology in education has become more popular. Special attention has been given to the adaptation of computer technology into the teaching-learning process for effective learning and increasing students' achievement. In recent years, it has been realized that there is an immense benefit in applying computer technology in the social studies classroom in the context of the high school. The first purpose of this study is to investigate the degree of application of these technologies in the social studies classroom, specifically it application in the discipline of archaeology. The second purpose is to show the use of different technologies in order to replace the traditional process of archaeological documentation with a digital one. In this contribution it is presented the methodology used for recording archaeological data in the excavation and in the laboratory, which consist on online database system for field recording and photogrammetry as a means of graphical documentation for the development of the excavated trenches. [For the complete volume, "Proceedings of International Conference on Social and Education Sciences (IConSES) (Chicago, Illinois, October 15-18, 2020). Volume 1," see ED626033.]
- Published
- 2020
7. Digging the Virtual Past
- Author
-
Polymeropoulou, Panagiota
- Abstract
In this paper we will investigate the way that the technological progress and the Informatics contributed greatly to the field of Archaeology. There will be analyzed the terms of virtual archaeology and virtual reality in archaeology and there will be an extended reference to the applications and the computer graphics that archaeologists could use for their own scientific purposes. It will be attempted to be shown the way that computer graphics can create not only an authentic copy of an archaeological find but can function also as a useful tool of learning for new archaeologists and the broader public that is interested in the ancient past. [For the complete proceedings, see ED557189.]
- Published
- 2014
8. Criticisms of Segal's Interpretation of the Ancient Greek Pentathlon.
- Author
-
Barney, Robert Knight
- Abstract
This paper examines the ancient Greek pentathlon as it was conducted during the Olympic games. The pentathlon was comprised of five sub-exercises: (1) the jump; (2) the discus throw; (3) the javelin throw; (4) the stade run; and (5) wrestling. Using scholarship in the fields of archaeology, ancient poetry and legends, and pictorial evidence such as paintings on vases, the author disputes some of the findings of other scholars on this subject, particularly those of Erich Segal of Yale University. A bibliography accompanies the paper. (JD)
- Published
- 1974
9. The Megalithic Monuments of Ireland and Their Folklore: A Photodocumentary Project.
- Author
-
Goldbaum, Howard
- Abstract
A photojournalism project is described in this paper that integrated the disciplines of photography, archaeology, and ethnology in an examination of prehistoric megalithic monuments in Ireland and their folklore. Following an introduction tracing the history of the monuments and pointing to the maintenance in Ireland of a body of oral tradition concerning many of them, the paper describes the methodology used in the project, which included (1) preliminary research and selection of monuments to be studied, (2) the study of archival folklore material, (3) the collecting of taped folklore interviews, and (4) the photographing of the people who served as folklore sources and of the monuments. Finally, the paper lists the types of monuments often associated with traditional beliefs and reports the most prevalent types of beliefs concerning the monuments, which involve beliefs about fairies, witches, gods, heroes, and kings, as well as fanciful "scientific" speculations about the creation and function of the monuments. Appendixes provide a list of instructions for folklore collectors, excerpts of transcripts from folkloric material collected for the project, and a bibliography of selected relevant publications. (GT)
- Published
- 1980
10. Archaeology as the Basis of an Inquiry Process Paradigm for Secondary Level Art Instruction.
- Author
-
Labadie, John Antoine
- Abstract
This paper explored how art history is taught in secondary schools. The author maintained that identifying the origins and evolution of ideas ensures that proposed models of teaching art history adhere to the philosophical base from which they derive. The paper is divided into five sections. In the first part, the author described four categories of historical inquiry: realistic, formal, expressive, and pragmatic, but argued that these are not mutually exclusive. He maintained that student populations, available resources, and educational goals are other factors that must be considered when deciding which model of art-history instruction to use. Section two, Models of Art History Instruction, reported on three approaches to art history instruction: works of art, information, and process. In section three, Art History as an Inquiry Process, differences between teaching art history as information processing or as a process of finding and answering questions are discussed. The Process Model: An Example Derived from Archaeology is the theme of section four. The author chose Native- American rock art to illustrate how such a lesson could be taught. He illustrated ways in which certain art historical practices might proceed in art education classrooms. Five categories are described: reconstruction, description, attribution, interpretation, and explanation. In the summary, the author explained how an instructor using the inquiry process must design questions which will encourage students to invent their own further inquiries. Resource files are necessary in the classroom for this process. (KM)
- Published
- 1991
11. Orality and Literacy--the Real Difference: A Historical Perspective.
- Author
-
Cox, Gary N.
- Abstract
Just as a contemporary professional person maintains copies of wills, real estate records, and court decrees, so did 15th-century B.C. residents of the ancient city of Nuzi. Such documents, then and now, are generally written by legal scribes. The Hittites of the 14th century B.C. maintained detailed manuals concerning the care and feeding of their horses. A Hittite birth ritual text refers to other texts in its descriptions of how women were to be prepared for giving birth. Considered by modern Egyptologists as among the greatest literary works of all time is Egypt's "The Report about the Dispute of a Man with His Ba," from 2000 B.C. It concerns a man's discussion with his own soul or spirit. The dispute is about the existence of life after death; it is metaphoric, self-referential, and searches for meaning in both life and death. The script is hieratic and phonetic. Recent reinterpretations have cast doubt on the common perception that the scientific inquiry that occurred in Greece was significantly more profound than that ongoing in China at the same time. In addition, analysts now doubt that alphabetic writing produces more logical thinking than does syllabic script, or that writing gives rise to "mentalities" that do not exist in non-literate cultures. It has even been asserted that conceptions of oral/literate dichotomies in thinking arose to distance European culture from Black or Semitic historical influences. Archaeological evidence disputes the belief that cultures outside of or previous to Athenian culture were primarily oral and hence incapable of the same kinds of cultural achievement of societies that used alphabetic phonetic scripts instead of syllabic phonetic scripts. (A photostat of a portion of the "Report about the dispute of a Man with His Ba" is attached.) (SB)
- Published
- 1992
12. Communication Media in Ancient Cultures.
- Author
-
Jabusch, David M.
- Abstract
Interest in early means of communication and in the uses and kinds of media that existed in ancient cultures is starting to grow among communication scholars. Conversation analysis of these cultures is obviously impossible, so that the emphasis must rest with material cultural artifacts. Many ancient cultures used non-verbal codes for dyadic communication. These cultures also applied their ingenuity to the problem of extending communications across distance and space, including smoke and whistle languages. The distinguishing characteristics of whistle languages have been identified. Trade and transportation networks were widely utilized for extending communication beyond the limits of smoke and whistling. Record keeping, often in extensive library facilities, was the primary method for extending communication over time. A particularly sophisticated method of record keeping was the "quipu" used by the Incas of Peru, a system of knotted cords that somewhat resembled old mops. Artworks, such as painting on ceramic vessels, provide insight into cultural lifestyles and information, and often pottery shards contained short notes. Incised stones were sometimes used for the same purposes. In short, what may have been characterized as pre-literate cultures actually possessed a vast array of communication media that were innovative, flexible, adaptive and functional. (HB)
- Published
- 1992
13. Educational Programs for Low-Income Youths in the Inner-City of Spokane, Washington: Fiscal Year 1973-1974.
- Author
-
Holland, David Lee
- Abstract
This paper explains the method used to locate low-income inner-city participants and describes progress during the first fiscal year of the endeavor. Several educational programs are described briefly. Among them are the archaeological summer camp, 4-H teams' participation in a basketball league, 4-H clubs' in the low-income inner-city target area, a 4-H club conference, and the renovation of Grant Park. A special instructor and basic reading and articulation program, which has as its objective the involvement of low income youth in activities considered interesting and educational, is described in detail. Classes conducted under this program include creative crafts, women's awareness, self awareness, basic reading and articulation, musicology, craft ideas, and others. The program is said to provide a viable means to reach and teach low-income people with great success. A motion film of this program documenting some of the described courses is scheduled for release in the fall of 1974. Success of the programs described is considered to be due to their applicability to both transient and stable life styles. Participation by minority groups in these programs is observed to have increased nine fold. The youth programs offered are held to reflect an applied anthropological approach to ethnic, minority, and majority interests. (Author/AM)
- Published
- 1974
14. The ceramics of Yughbī (Qatar), one of the earliest Islamic sites of the Gulf.
- Author
-
CARVAJAL LÓPEZ, JOSÉ CRISTÓBAL
- Subjects
CERAMICS ,PETROLOGY ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,MICROSCOPY ,DESERTS ,POTSHERDS - Abstract
In this paper the results of the macroscopic and petrographic analysis of the ceramics of the site of Yughbī are presented. This site was excavated in 2018, during the final fieldwork campaign of The Crowded Desert Project. It is so far the earliest Islamic site known in Qatar and one of the earliest ones in the Gulf, and it features a very well contextualized ceramic assemblage of 697 sherds, most of which date to a period between AD 660s and 770s. The ceramics of Yughbī have been studied both macroscopically and with petrographic microscopy. The combination of both analyses shows the presence of South Iraqi, Eastern Arabian, and Indian wares, but an almost total lack of Iranian wares. The comparison of connectivity profiles between the ceramics of Yughbī and those of other sites of the same period (late Sasanian and early Islamic) indicate a certain similarity with -ohār and, to a lesser extent, with Kush and Bushehr. The ceramic assemblage of Yughbī is much less similar to that of closer sites, such as -īr Banī Yās, Sīrāf, or Bilād al-Qadīm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
15. Native Cultural Resource Management: A Proposal for Training.
- Author
-
Schneider, William
- Abstract
Given the July 1st, 1976 deadline for selection by the Alaska Native corporations of historical, archaeological, and cemetery sites under 14 (h) (1) of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, the corporations need to know how to protect their resources; what opportunities the Federal and State governments and the professional community can provide to help meet this need; and when such opportunities should be made available. It is important, then, that the Native corporations plan to train Native people as cultural resource managers to: monitor regional development plans; serve as contacts for subregional groups; coordinate the timing and execution of Environmental Impact Statements; set up cultural centers; control trespassers; serve as coordinating contacts for State and Federal agencies involved in preservation; identify professionals as resource people; secure aid in developing Native regional plans. The Federal and State governments and the professional community can respond to this need by providing training programs (Federal and State agency internships, formal course work in related fields, and regional corporation internships) in cultural resources management that initially provide awareness and promote community involvement, preservation knowledge, and self determination. A training program should be developed immediately to insure Native involvement in the decisions relative to preservation. (JC)
- Published
- 1976
16. Art History and Archaeology: A Symbiotic Relationship.
- Author
-
Labadie, John Antoine and Labadie, Joseph Henry
- Abstract
The way archaeologists use tools and draw inferences about them to disembed meaning from artworks is examined. The prehistoric rock paintings of the Lower Pecos River (Texas) are used to illustrate these ideas. An overview of this rock art, specifically the Amistad reservoir, is provided. The deductions of archaeologists about the semi-nomadic people who lived in this environment, now southwest Texas and northern Mexico are depicted. A method for conducting an art-historical inquiry of the Lower Pecos pictography is outlined. W. Eugene Kleinbauer's definition of art historical inquiry is delineated, and his perspective is used to discuss the pictographs. Examples of intrinsic and extrinsic art historical questions are presented. An overview of the five basic stages of Lower Pecos pictographs is related, beginning with the oldest style--the Pecos River Style, followed by the Red Linear, Bold Line Geometric, Red Monochrome, and the Historic style. Four techniques/methods of the rock-art paintings are outlined: (1) the vegetal fiber brush; (2) artist's fingers; (3) beeswax crayons; and (4) blowing liquefied paint into the rock surface. Early archaeologists' interpretations are compared with more contemporary theories. The conclusion maintains that enhanced understanding of prehistoric and historic rock art requires a multi-disciplinary inquiry and that curricula in schools must be developed to include such information. (KM)
- Published
- 1990
17. Anthropology and Multicultural Education: Classroom Applications. Publication 83-1.
- Author
-
Georgia Univ., Athens. Anthropology Curriculum Project., Moses, Yolanda T., and Higgins, Patricia J.
- Abstract
Useful models and ideas for multicultural and cross-cultural educators at all levels who want to use anthropological concepts and processes in the classroom are provided in eight papers. Papers describe six different projects which (1) involved high school students in the collection and analysis of data about local youth cultures; (2) engaged college students in an introductory anthropology course which conducted a participant-observation study of various small groups; (3) used oral history to teach about the concepts of culture and ethnicity; (4) emphasized direct experience and a hands-on approach in archaeology programs developed for pre-college students; (5) promoted an appreciation of cultural relativity and stereotyping by using obsolete films; and (6) examined the use of non-Western mathematics to improve students' mathematical concepts and skills and their cultural awareness. The last two papers deal with teacher training programs, including the use of the simulation BaFa BaFa and its juvenile version RaFa RaFa to teach about cultural pluralism, and pre-college teacher training programs in multicultural education. (RM)
- Published
- 1981
18. Use of INAA in archaeology in Greece
- Author
-
Kilikoglou, V
- Published
- 1992
19. Iroquois Culture, History, and Prehistory. Proceedings of the 1965 Conference on Iroquois Research.
- Author
-
New York State Museum, Albany., New York State Education Dept., Albany., and Tooker, Elisabeth
- Abstract
Although the Iroquois are one of the most thoroughly studied Indian peoples of this continent, many important aspects of their history and culture remain unexplained. For the past 20 years the Conference on Iroquois Research has reported on current research and discussed needs and opportunities for future research. Twenty papers are included in this document. These deal with such subjects as aspects of recent change on the Allegany Reservation, early years of the Seneca nation, etymology of the word "Iroquois," the Onondaga Bowl Game, and acculturation on the Tyendinaga Reserve in Canada. Another paper suggests the Huron and Iroquois may not have had as strong a matrilocal rule of residence in the 17th century as previously believed. Interest by the Tuscaroras to revive their language is also discussed. An ethnohistorical study of Hocheloga made in connection with the restudy of the Dawson site is given, as well as a discussion of some hitherto unreported pottery types in Eastern Ontario and Southern Quebec. Five papers report on archaeological work at the Kelso, Howlett Hill, Garoga, Simmons, and Cornish Sites. Three reports are concerned with other aspects of analysis and interpretation of archaeological data; these deal with pottery analysis in terms of "attributes" rather than types, pottery analysis as a source for inferences on social relationships and organizations among the Straits of Mackinac peoples, and the use of ethnographic data to interpret archaeological data from the Mohr site. The final paper deals with the Anthropology Study Curriculum Project. History and purposes of the Conference on Iroquois Research are also given. (Author/DS)
- Published
- 1967
20. Coherent knowledge structures and fusion practice for contextualisation insight in prehistory and protohistory.
- Author
-
Rückemann, Claus-Peter
- Subjects
PROBLEM solving ,INFORMATION science ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,NURSING informatics - Abstract
This paper presents a new knowledge-based methodology and realisation for coherent contextualisation in prehistory and protohistory, deploying structural knowledge and structure-based fusion for problem solving. The goal of this fundamental long-term information science research is a sustainable realisation of multi-disciplinary knowledge integration. Essential means are facilities integrating complementary and descriptive knowledge and intrinsic object properties. The research presents a previously unpublished advanced practical implementation for contextualisation considering multi-disciplinary and multi-lingual knowledge object entities, resources, and references. Disciplines span prehistory, archaeology, natural sciences and humanities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Documentation and evaluation of maritime endangered archaeology in the Kingdom of Bahrain (the MarEA project).
- Author
-
ORTIZ-VAZQUEZ, RODRIGO, CARTER, ROBERT, BLUE, LUCY, and AL-MAHARI, SALMAN
- Subjects
COASTAL archaeology ,HISTORIC sites ,CULTURAL property ,REMOTE-sensing images ,URBAN growth ,UNDERWATER archaeology ,ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
This paper outlines some of the research goals and methodological objectives of the Maritime Endangered Archaeology (MarEA) project, taking the maritime and coastal archaeology of the Kingdom of Bahrain as a case study. The Arabian Gulf's exponential population growth and fast rate of urban development, particularly in the coastal margins, has had a profound impact on the maritime cultural heritage (MCH) of the region and in particular, on the coastal heritage of the Kingdom of Bahrain over the last decades. Therefore, the need to document and assess threats to the maritime and coastal archaeology of the island has never been so urgent. MarEA aims to document and record submerged and coastal archaeology of the Middle East and North Africa, through the analysis of satellite imagery, extant datasets, and literature, working closely with local partners. The project evaluates disturbances and threats acting upon the cultural heritage. It does so by consolidating the information in EAMENA's (Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East and North Africa project) open-access database. This paper highlights MarEA's methodology by demonstrating an analysis of threats and changes that have destroyed, impacted, or continue to impact maritime cultural heritage sites in Bahrain, including Qal'at al-Bahrain, the coastal towns of Manama and Muharraq, and offshore sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
22. Skryté kulturní hodnoty chráněných území.
- Author
-
Fišer, Jan, Novák, David, and Šmejda, Ladislav
- Subjects
NATURE reserves ,CULTURAL landscapes ,ECONOMIC structure ,ELECTRONIC data processing ,RELICS - Abstract
The cultural character of the landscape stems not only from its current economic structure but also from the anthropogenic past reflected in numerous relics, which show that people in the past also used the part of the landscape that is now protected for its natural values. However, the intensity of these activities was linked to general settlement strategies with a strong respect to the geomorphological characteristics of the landscape. Large-scale protected natural areas are characterised by exceptional landscape features or significant natural values. Even in these parts of the landscape, past human influence was significant and left its traces. The intensity and specifics of this influence are presented in the paper on the basis of archaeological data. The archaeological data were processed into a grid whose values are related to the number of archaeological periods present in the given area. The protected landscape was used by people rather sporadically and the increase in activity can only be associated with the mediaeval and modern periods. Areas of the unprotected landscape were more intensively used in the past. However, the explanation for the difference is not based on social preferences but on the geomorphological structure of the protected landscape and its associated settlement history. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
23. SUPPOSE A SITUATION: WHAT FOUCAULT HELPS UNCOVER.
- Author
-
Weiland, Travis
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,HIGH school students ,MATHEMATICS ,DISCOURSE analysis ,METHODOLOGY - Abstract
In this paper, I discuss an Archeological analysis of two high school mathematics textbook series in an effort to investigate how actions for the doing of statistics are formed by statements from the statistics lessons the texts. The objective of this paper is not to present all of the findings related to the posed question, but to focus on discussing the methodology employed (i.e. Foucauldian Discourse Analysis), which is relatively novel for analyzing textbooks in mathematics education. One finding will be presented to highlight how the methodology employed can contribute to the field helping to uncover patterns not found using well established deductive frameworks. This methodological discussion is meant to provide an example of how using different methodologies can help to investigate issues in the field and problematize taken for granted norms against a new horizon to embrace the sociopolitical turn. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
24. Funerary archaeology in Qatar: old data and new discoveries.
- Author
-
SAKAL, FERHAN, BALDONI, MARICA, AL-HASHMI, MUNA, TOMEI, SARA, MARTINEZ-LABARGA, CRISTINA, and AL NAIMI, FAISAL
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,IRON Age ,POPULATION dynamics ,INTERMENT ,ANTHROPOMETRY - Abstract
This paper reports preliminary findings from select re-analyses and new excavations conducted under remit of the project 'Human Populations and Demographics in Qatar from the Neolithic to the Late Iron Age' (performed in cooperation with Sidra Medicine, the Department of Biology of the University of Rome Tor Vergata, and Qatar Museums Authority). Due to the absence of large settlements, our understanding of pre-Islamic societies in Qatar has until recently been extremely limited. However, progress in bioarchaeological research methods offers new possibilities to address this knowledge gap. Several thousand pre-Islamic burials can now be used as an important resource to elucidate the relationship between population dynamics and sociocultural changes in pre-Islamic Qatar. In addition to analysis of previously excavated skeletal remains, new excavations can be conducted in carefully chosen cemeteries from different pre-Islamic periods, thereby allowing bioarchaeological samples to be retrieved from undisturbed burial contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
25. Geological Heritage Assessment for Sustainable Development of Lenggong Valley.
- Author
-
Stafa, Rapidah Mat, Ali, Che Aziz, Mohamed, Kamal Roslan, Leman, Mohd Shafeea, and Saidin, Mokhtar
- Subjects
PRESERVATION of cultural property ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,SUSTAINABLE development ,CULTURAL values ,VALLEYS - Abstract
The quantitative methodology for assessment of geosite can be used for the sustainable management and conservation of geological heritage of an area. The main aim of this paper is to develop the methodology for identification, characterization and evaluation of every geosite based on the quantitative assessment. This early stage of evaluation discussed on criteria that cover all value sets and its potential of used. Value sets take into account the scientific value, cultural value, ecological value, aesthetic value and economic value, respectively. The total scores based on quantitative analysis will be used to determine the ranking of the geosite. Following the description of the proposed method, the paper presents the assessment results of thirteen selected geosite in the Archaeological Heritage of Lenggong Valley. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Research outside academia? - An analysis of resources in extra-academic report writing.
- Author
-
Börjesson, Lisa
- Subjects
SCHOLARLY publishing ,GREY literature ,INFORMATION sharing ,UNIVERSITY research ,ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
ABSTRACT A significant part of all research takes place in extra-academic organizations. Practitioner researchers often present their results in publications different from those in academia, e.g. in reports, sometimes (and here) referred to as 'gray literature'. Gray literature is increasingly available online. However, availability does not mean that reports are exploited to their full potential in research. Disciplines like archaeology have substantial problems with the scholarly communication and knowledge sharing between extra-academic and academic research. This paper approaches this problem from a report-user perspective. For the benefit of potential report users' gray literature literacies, report-writing practices are analyzed by means of practice theory. Qualitative interviews with six practitioner researchers in Swedish archaeology firms make up the material. The analysis focuses on how report writers draw on regulative, institutional, and infrastructural resources in their practices. Based on the findings about the practices in which reports are written and become informative, the paper presents seven suggestions supporting report users' potential to critically analyze and use report content. The results contribute to the information science field with insights into extra-academic information practices, and as input in a wider critical discussion of the information-related conditions for research outside academia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Vēstures pētīšana Jūliusa Fridriha Dēringa (1816-1898) un Augusta Johana Gotfrīda Bīlenšteina (1826-1907) atmiņās.
- Author
-
Broka-Lāce, Zenta and Lacis, Krišjānis
- Abstract
Julius Döring and August Bielenstein are among the most visible intellectuals of their epoch. Both share their German origin, association with Mitau (Jelgava), their participation in the workings of The Courland (Kurzeme) Society for Literature and Art, and both had a wide range of interests in common. The names of both researchers are structurally and genealogically linked to the beginnings of the archaeological science in the territory of Latvia. They have travelled to, searched for, and identified various archaeological sites in the territory of Latvia, both have carried out excavations and written several articles on topics related to Latvian prehistory, furthermore - and what is of special interest to this paper - both have left detailed written accounts of reflections and memories recounting their life and activities. Döring's " What I Would Never Like to Forget or Memories From My Life " and Bielenstein's "A Happy Life" are excellent sources of historical and cultural significance that enable one to track nor only the life-paths led by both researchers, bur also provide an excellent insight into the concurrent events and intellectual proceedings of their time, including the backstage of antiquity research. Therefore in this paper the attention is focused on both biographies, an approach that allows a better understanding of the theoretical preconditions for the formation of particular discipline, enables one to approximate the individual philosophy and self-understanding of scientific activity of both researchers, and allows one to reconstruct the background of intellectual influences and cultural references. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
28. USING RADAR DATA IN ARCHEOLOGICAL SITES.
- Author
-
Hanzalova, Karolina, Pavelka, Karel, and Hlavacova, Ivana
- Subjects
REMOTE sensing ,MICROWAVE devices ,WAVELENGTHS ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,ELECTROMAGNETIC spectrum ,PHOTOCHEMISTRY - Abstract
Using a radar data widens the possibilities of archeological prospection extremely. The resolution of the available sensors was quite limited that the detection of huge upstanding monuments or culture landscape was possible. Data of the remote sensing have different purposes of use. Radar data make it possible to monitor the Earth's surface in any weather. Radar is an active system that generates its own radiation in the microwave part of the electromagnetic spectrum. The radar systems work in the wavelength range distances 0.8 - 100 cm. This interval is divided into sub-bands, called the Ka, Ku, K, X, C, L, P. This paper shows two radar sensors. Sensor PALSAR with fine resolution of up to 7m, which is part of satellite ALOS and sensor SAR, which is part of the German satellites TanDEM-X with resolution of 6 m. In Peru there are many of archeological sites. Some of them are buried under a layer of sand or soil. The layer is usually tens of centimeters thick. For these purposes, we need sensor that can penetrate the soil and provide information about buried archeological sites as well. The archeological site Chankillo is a gut example. About Chankillo was written many articles. Chankillo is located near the small town of Casma in an area that is very rich in interesting historical objects (Sechin). Chankillo is a famous complex with thirteen towers that were used as a solar observatory (Ghezzi and Rugless, 2007 and Pavelka at all, 2013). Chankillo also has residential and gathering areas that we can see on Google Earth (GE). On GE we can also see that near Chankillo are a few rectangular constructions. About these construction sites there is not information. Therefore it is good to use radar data for information about this place. If radar sensors can penetrate the sand and detect the buried objects, it will be good strategic information for archaeologists. A second archeological site is the very famous Nazca desert plain in Peru, where there are well known structures called geoglyphs. The geoglyphs were studied by German mathematician named Maria Reiche (Reiche 1996). But the place near Nasca city called Palpa de Nasca is not only geoglyphs (Pavelka at all, 2013). A lot of other very interesting cultural and archaeological sites can be found in the Nasca area. At CTU, we started a new project that is focused on archaeo-astronomical orientations of important objects in Peru as a part of long term "Nazca" project. In this paper we use the radar data to identify historical object in the Nasca area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
29. Raising Awareness on Archaeology: A Multiplayer Game‐Based Approach With Mixed Reality.
- Author
-
Loiseau, Mathieu, Lavoué, Élise, Marty, Jean‐Charles, and George, Sébastien
- Subjects
MIXED reality ,CLASSROOM environment ,COVID-19 pandemic ,EDUCATIONAL games ,ACTIVE learning - Abstract
Our research deals with the development of a new type of game‐based learning environment: (M)MORPG based on mixed reality, applied in the archaeological domain. In this paper, we propose a learning scenario that enhances players’ motivation thanks to individual, collaborative and social activities and that offers a continuous experience between the virtual environment and real places (archaeological sites, museum). After describing the challenge to a rich multidisciplinary approach involving both computer scientists and archaeologists, we present two types of game: multiplayer online role‐playing games and mixed reality games. We build on the specificities of these games to make the design choices described in the paper. The proposed approach aims at raising awareness among people on the scientific approach in Archaeology, by providing them information in the virtual environment and encouraging them to go on real sites. We finally discuss the issues raised by this work, such as the tensions between the perceived individual, team and community utilities, as well as the choice of the entering point in the learning scenario (real or virtual) for the players’ involvement in the game. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
30. A Dialogue of Resistance: Comparing Bakhtin and Foucualt on the Question of Resistance.
- Author
-
Whooley, Owen
- Subjects
POWER (Social sciences) ,POLITICAL opposition ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
Although Foucault's understanding of power does not preclude the possibility of resistance, the depictions that emerge from his work fail to address resistance adequately. His is the work of the all-seeing Panopticon, the totalizing episteme, and the normalizing police. This paper seeks to understand why notions of resistance have been obscured in Foucault's work, despite his theory of power. The answer to this question can be found in Foucault's theory of discourse, embodied in both archaeology and genealogy. This theory subscribes to a specific view of discourse and practices that leads to the neglect of resistance. This paper begins with an exploration of both archaeology and genealogy, and the resulting studies that emerge from them. Having discussed the pitfalls to Foucault's approach to discourse, I then turn to the work of M.M. Bakhtin as an alternative. Bakhtin posits a dialogic approach to discourse analysis. I argue that a dialogic approach is more adequate in portraying resistance than Foucault's archaeology. To show this value-added I cite a specific example of a dialogic approach to an interaction between a doctor and a patient (Young, 1989). I offer Bakhtin's approach not in substitution to Foucault, but rather view the relationship as complimentary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
31. An Attempt to Nuance the Understanding of Professional Reports in Archaeology.
- Author
-
Börjesson, Lisa
- Subjects
GREY literature ,KNOWLEDGE management ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,STANDARDIZATION ,ARCHAEOLOGISTS ,BIBLIOMETRICS - Abstract
Professional (i.e. extra-academic) contract archaeology is an internationally widespread practice contributing significantly to the archaeology literature. However, professional knowledge production in archaeology, and most notably the professional report genre, is at times described as problematic. The problem descriptions are ambiguous and can be grouped under at least three different topics: concerns for content quality and practical accessibility, concerns for the comparably low degree of analytical and theoretical synthesizing in reports and concerns for lack of mutual knowledge transfer between academic archaeologists and professional archaeologists. Technical issues of access are to an increasing extent being solved. Format standardizations are also developing. Hence the report genre becomes more accessible, and the content more readable and informative. Yet articulations of attitudes toward the genre in archaeology text books and journal articles remain focused on the genre's problems. The aim of my ongoing dissertation research is to nuance the understanding of the professional report genre in archaeology. I do so by analyzing factors shaping reporting as it takes place in the intersection between academic norms, professional values and market logics. I argue an improved genre understanding is crucial to diminish cultural issues of access to the report literature, and also as a basis for development of reporting practices. In the dissertation research I analyze (1) perceptions about the report genre in archaeology literature, (2) information policy regulating reporting in archaeology, (3) how report writers and county board professionals interpret the reporting and report auditing work tasks and (4) the frames of reference report writers bring into reporting. The aim of this paper is to explicate the research design consisting of four sub-studies, to briefly report on findings from study no. 4, and to discuss preliminary, partial results from study no. 2. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
32. THE ROYAL SUMMER PALACE IN LOBZOW IN POLAND. CONSERVATION AND REASERCH PROBLEMS BEFORE AND AFTER ADAPTATION A HISTORICAL BUILDING TO THE NEW FUNCTION.
- Author
-
Stala, Klaudia
- Subjects
HISTORIC buildings ,MODERNIZATION theory ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,EXCAVATION ,INTERIOR architecture - Abstract
The summer residence of Polish kings was built in Lobzow, a small village located in a previous neighboring Cracow city, former capital of Polish Kingdom. Nowadays Lobzow is a popular district situated close to the old historical center. The main aim of the paper is to present some research and design difficulties in the palace, connected with the specifics of the place, as well as the complicated stratigraphic situation, being the result of several transformations which took place in a residence during its long history. The very poor condition of the building was the first huge problem for the researchers and conservators. The interiors were seriously destroyed, among them were beautiful wooden painted ceilings, historical stone details, etc. In that circumstances the most important was to start architectural research and archeological excavation before conservation and designing works. The excavations and all required research also historical and archival started in 1999. Thanks to preserved written sources we know about early history of the royal palace. The beginnings of the residence date from XIV century when a small castrum was built. Next it was transformed into a huge Mannerist palace at the end of XVI century and rebuilt in a Baroque style a little bit later. Then it was demolished by Swedish army to be reconstructed and expanded in XIX century as cadets' high school. Because of its reach history with so many architectonical transformations, the palace is a true challenge for scientists and the reconstruction of its historical changes and following phases is like a puzzle. The results of the research gave some new information about this complicated but fascinating building. They confirmed mostly the information we had from historical sources but they allowed also to recognize some unknown phases and discovered some architectural solution applied here which we hadn't expected before. Although they became a base for the conservation designing and modernization actions leading to the final adaptation of the building. In a future one should take into account the revaluation of the surrounding park with the royal gardens and archaeological researches on the court yard. Nowadays the building belongs to Cracow University of Technology and it is a main seat of Faculty of Architecture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. WHEN ARCHAEOLOGY MEETS URBANISM: THE EFFECTS OF URBAN PLANNING ON ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES WITHIN URBAN PERIPHERIES UNDER EXPANSION.
- Author
-
Del Espino Hidalgo, Blanca and Fernández, Francisco José García
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,CITIES & towns ,URBAN planning ,ANTIQUITIES ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
This paper attempts to tackle a problem that intrinsically affects archaeological sites located outside the places where they are generally found and valued: on the one hand, historical centres -where they tend to form part of musealisation projects on an urban scale- and, on the other hand, rural or natural environments -where the sites, generally of a larger scale, constitute a benchmark in themselves in terms of both protection, research and visitor reception. However, our research focuses on those archaeological sites located in the urban periphery and, more specifically, on their treatment by hands of the planning instruments that have designed the growth of the city in recent decades. The situation of economic growth experienced by Spain, together with other European countries, at the end of the last century and at the beginning of the present one, implied a great expansion of the urban fabric that ended up transforming in a short time the periphery of the cities and affecting the patrimonial elements (both natural and cultural) that were located in their borders, among them, numerous archaeological sites of great relevance. To this must be added the construction of large road infrastructures-roads and high-speed railroads-that accompanied the re-dimensioning of the urban-territorial network. To address its main objective, the work will follow a methodology based on in situ analysis, bibliography and official planning instruments over a case study located in the interior of Andalusia: the city of Lucena, in the province of Cordoba. This city is a paradigmatic example for analysing the effect of this double dynamic of urban growth and the implementation of large infrastructures, as well as the diversity in the destination and the effects that rapid urban expansion has had on its heritage elements, as it contains in its surroundings remains of different periods and occupations ranging from Prehistory (the Cave of the Angel) to Roman and Late Antiquity. As results, we can highlight three important sites that have suffered different fate: the Roman kilns of El Tejar, abandoned next to the construction of a highway; the Paleo-Christian and Late Antique basilica of Coracho, dismantled and moved to an environment out of context, surrounded by industrial buildings; and the Jewish necropolis, which forced the displacement of a large ring road, and it has been rehabilitated and opened to the public as a major tourist attraction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. An ecosystem of tools and methods for archeological research.
- Author
-
Gianni, Giovanna Bagnasco, Marzullo, Matilde, Valtolina, Stefano, Barricelli, Barbara Rita, Bortolotto, Susanna, Favino, Piero, Garzulino, Andrea, and Simonelli, Raffaella
- Abstract
The present paper describes the design strategies of an ecosystem of tools and services, currently under construction, developed in cooperation among archaeologists and computer science experts of the Università degli Studi di Milano and architects and topographers of the Politecnico di Milano. This ecosystem is based on the archaeological experience carried out in Tarquinia since 1982 in the frame of the “Tarquinia Project”. The project takes into account the analysis and processing of multifaceted archaeological evidences in a context-oriented environment, in which interdisciplinary contributions of several scientist are combined and integrated, in order to grasp the original system of interaction of different branches of the ancient reality. Such a cooperation needs a system of "query/communication" able to integrate archaeological data, artefacts and architectural structures (subsoil and over-ground), cartographic and photographic documentation and scientific contents, achieved in the past and implemented during the field research. The proposed ecosystem aims to provide a set of services for federating different existing data-sources (GIS, including 3D tools), through the definition of a semantic network of relationships among landscapes, stratigraphic layers, structures and artefacts of an excavation site (ArchMatrix). This ecosystem is based on an innovative global design method, focused on the management of raw-data captured and analyzed by different experts in a collaborative way. The aim is to develop a solution able to support analyses and studies grounded in the real needs of the archaeological investigation, by enabling archaeologists in producing archaeological and historical interpretations starting from the real core of the documentation they deal with. In such a framework, the present paper focuses on a novel approach to identify the object of the archaeological research, starting from the needs of field archaeology, and on the design of a system meant to solve problems according to an integrated approach in a unique context of analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. From Middle-Range to Grand Theory: Three Emergent Pathways.
- Author
-
Hirose, Akihiko
- Subjects
SOCIAL theory ,MIDDLE range theories ,PHILOSOPHY & social sciences ,SYSTEMS theory ,SOCIAL sciences ,ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
Robert K. Merton's middle range theory is one of the most influential programmatic statements on the epistemology of sociological theory. However, its accompanying theoretical procedures and ultimate goals remain vague. Consequently, the wide-recognition and favored usage of the middle range approach by both theorists and researchers seems to have contributed to the abandonment of a path toward a systematic, grand sociological theory. Nonetheless, there have been some attempts to link middle-range theorizing to grand theory. This paper searches for a possible of grand system of sociological theory by examining three emergent strategic pathways to achieving a grand theory from the level of middle-range theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
36. Analysing the Archaeological Context: Reconstructing Stratigraphic Layers.
- Author
-
Schubert, Lutz, Predoi, Ana, and Jeffery, Keith
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,STRATIGRAPHIC geology ,GEOGRAPHIC spatial analysis ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,GEOGRAPHY - Abstract
The stratigraphic layout of an excavation determines how finds can be interpreted regarding their timeline and relationships with each other. Older excavation reports do not fully record this layout however and reconstructing the relationships is often subject to conjecture. In this paper we present a first approach for reasoning over and visualizing the stratigraphy given only profile information. We will demonstrate how this can be used for spatial analysis, but also for reasoning over different processes contributing to the found layout, including potential influences that left no visible traces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Archeology and evolution of QCD.
- Author
-
Rújula, A. De
- Subjects
QUARKS ,QUANTUM chromodynamics ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
These are excerpts from the closing talk at the "XIIth Conference on Quark Confinement and the Hadron Spectrum", which took place last Summer in Thessaloniki -an excellent place to enjoy an interest in archeology. A more complete personal view of the early days of QCD and the rest of the Standard Model is given in [1]. Here I discuss a few of the points which -to my judgement- illustrate well the QCD evolution (in time), both from a scientific and a sociological point of view. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A SPECIAL TYPE OF EARRING FROM ALTAI SITES OF THE HUNNO-SARMATIAN PERIOD.
- Author
-
Soenov, Vasilii and Trifanova, Synaru
- Subjects
JEWELRY ,ALTAI (Turkic people) ,MATERIAL culture ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,ANTIQUITIES ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL cultures - Abstract
Eleven examples of a special type of jewellery - flat, double spiral, bronze wire earrings have been recorded in monuments dated to the late Hunno-Sarmatian period. This paper analyses the main characteristics of the jewellery in question and their area of distribution. It also focuses on a likely source of origin within the culture of the Altai people. We note that neither prototypes nor analogues have been found at Altai sites dated to the Early Iron Age and Middle Ages. Nor have analogues been found in adjacent regions of South Siberia and Central Asia. Nonetheless, a detailed study of the criteria of discovery and characteristics of the earring type throws light on their date and origin. According to the authors, these artefacts date to the period between the second half of the 3rd century and the 5th century AD, and their origin is related to the appearance in Altai of samples of the Xianby material culture from Northern China via Mongolia during the time of Tobas and Muyun dynasty rule. All earrings in question were found in burials of women. Due to their unique nature, flat, double spiral-shaped earrings are established as a diagnostic attribute of the Altai archaeological culture in the late Hunno-Sarmatian period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. DATING OF ARTEFACTS FROM NASCA REGION AND FALSIFICATION OF "MANDALA" GEOGLYPH.
- Author
-
Pavelka, Karel, Matoušková, Eva, and Faltýnová, Martina
- Subjects
GEOGLYPHS ,CULTURAL property ,ANTIQUITIES ,REMOTE-sensing images ,MACHU Picchu Site (Peru) - Abstract
Peru is worldwide known due to UNECSO world heritage like Cuzco, Machu Picchu or Nasca desert lines. However, other areas are unknown for many people and cannot be saved on national level due lack of finance. Many valuable historical areas were destroyed in the past by climatic events; many were destroyed during last five centuries by man. Near well-known city of Nasca, there is an archaeological site Cahuachi, which was a ceremonial centre of the Nasca culture. This culture is often joined with famous Nasca lines, whose origin and reason are still unknown. There is much evidence that indicates that the Nasca Lines were created by people from Cahuachi; it is supported by a number of found artefacts but the origin and purpose of all Nasca Lines are still not explained satisfactory (mainly figural geoglyphs or trapezoids). The archaeological survey [10] shows that this important centre was at least three times damaged by El-Niňo; last catastrophic flooding around 350 AC meant the end of this big ceremonial centre. The complete fall of Nasca civilization was around 750AC. This was apparently due to El Niño effect which triggered destructive flooding. Excavation shows many pieces of evidence of this catastrophe. German-Czech expedition in 2004, 2008, 2010 and 2012 investigated and documented some parts of Peruvian history; original maps using terrestrial and aerial photogrammetry, GNSS measurements and very high resolution satellite images have been created. Field work was focused on dating of some parts near Nasca city; project outputs will be described in this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
40. AN INTEGRATED APPROACH FOR MEDIEVAL HILLFORTS STUDY (REPUBLIC OF TATARSTAN, RUSSIA).
- Author
-
Gaynullin, Iskander, Kasimov, Aleksey, Khomyakov, Petr, and Usmanov, Bulat
- Subjects
ANTIQUITIES ,MEDIEVAL fortification ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,EXCAVATION ,PRESERVATION of cultural property - Abstract
Integrated approach now is a priority in archaeological sites study. In this paper, we consider the possibility of modern methods usage to estimate archaeological hillforts condition on the territory of the Republic of Tatarstan. In our view, the analysis of medieval fortified settlements of X-XIII centuries, the most common in the territory of the Republic of Tatarstan, has the highest priority. Because always the main criteria for the selection of favorable place to settle was the closeness of the water and the presence of natural fortifications, most of the archaeological sites usually located on the banks and terraces of small rivers, where influence of fluvial and exogenous processes is possible. Intensive territory development (plowing, irrigation, active construction, etc.) also led to a significant change in exterior of monuments and often - to their complete disappearance. So, the main task of our investigation is to provide both historical data and operational information about the current state of archaeological sites. This article gives an example of modern techniques application to study hillforts that exposed to different types of negative impacts. The complex method including GIS, multitemporal remote sensing data and GNSS survey provides not only assessment of the risk of study sites damage, but also archaeological data updating and development of specific measures for historical and cultural heritage conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
41. UNDERSTANDING THE NEOLITHIC HOUSEHOLD IN SLOVAKIA.
- Author
-
Pažinová, Noémi Beljak and Niklová, Michaela
- Subjects
NEOLITHIC Period ,HOUSEHOLDS ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,FAMILIES - Abstract
The term household is perhaps for anyone unfamiliar concept. In general, it is possible to say that the current household responds to jointly economize family living under one roof. However, in retrospect to the general description, understanding and especially the subsequent possibility of identifying households may vary considerably. Within the Slovak (and world as well) history the first households can be considered in the Neolithic period, when were established the first permanent settlements. Attention is focused especially on them because settlement building represents a major milestone in human society. Households were defined by scientists in countless ways. Each study focused on prehistoric households gave its own view of their clarification. Ultimately, there is a problem how to define a household term in prehistoric times without using traditional, contemporary, vision of this term. Difficulties also lie in how to identify the household in the archaeological record. Our study focuses on the Neolithic settlements in Slovakia and the main aim is to highlight the possibilities and challenges in the study of households in this period. We will attempt to summarize available information on households from published papers related to the observed period and to find answers to the questions of the existence of households and to which extent data are available in the archaeological record. Household archaeology as an independent research direction has worldwide undoubtedly several decades of tradition therefore it is time to interpret settlement features and finds in the territory of Slovakia in a new way, with a focus on the activities of households, their relation to families and neighbouring residences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
42. SPATIAL INFORMATION RECORDING PROCEDURE INVOLVING METHODS OF CLOSE RANGE PHOTOGRAMMETRY AS APPLIED TO ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCHES.
- Author
-
Starovoytov, Alexander and Saifutdinova, Guzel
- Subjects
PHOTOGRAMMETRY ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,PHOTOGRAPHY ,CAMERAS ,ORTHOPHOTOGRAPHY - Abstract
To date, the already existing traditional methods of archaeological field data classification and archiving do not meet modern requirements in the context of accuracy and convenience. The purpose of this study is to create and test more effective methods based on close range photogrammetry and GIS, which can be used to record all the stages of archaeological excavation process. Within the scope of the pilot project covering the territory of Bulgar ancient town (heritage asset), four methods of close range photogrammetry were used to depict all the excavation objects: 1) technique of central axis; 2) technique of perspective route photography shooting; 3) technique of fixed angles; 4) technique of suborthogonal photography shooting around perimeter. To reduce the cost of the survey, amateur cameras were used. Photogrammetric measurement results are: orthophoto, digital terrain model, three-dimensional model covered with surface texture. These data eliminate the need of sketching excavation objects and performing leveling. Success depends only upon the correct choice of the positioning method. The method proposed in this paper is a finished tool which can be used by archaeologists. During the pilot test it became possible to minimize cartographic activities. Quality of the result obtained using photogrammetry and GIS was significantly higher in comparison to manual processing outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
43. SOME REMARKS REGARDING THE PETROLOGIC STUDY OF SEVERAL BRONZE AGE STONE AXES UNCOVERED ON THE SUCEAVA PLATEAU (NORTHEAST ROMANIA).
- Author
-
Popescu, Daniela Alexandra, Popescu, Liviu Gheorghe, and Niculica, Bogdan Petru
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,VOLCANIC ash, tuff, etc. ,NEOGENE Period ,SEDIMENTARY rocks ,IGNEOUS rocks - Abstract
The scope of this paper is a very actual subject within the Romanian archaeology: the identification of the raw matter used to manufacture certain categories of prehistoric stone tool inventory, as well as the tracing of its provenance. The artifacts subjected to the analysis originate within the Suceava Plateau, a subunit of the Moldavian Plateau, located in the Northeastern Romania, a region well-known for its rich Bronze Age finds. From a geo-structural point of view, the Suceava Plateau overlays the Moldavian Platform, this is in fact the southwestern edge of the East European Platform. Out of the nine-sample group selected for the analysis, eight are fragments of stone axes of Early and Middle Bronze Age (around 3500-1500 BC); the remaining sample was extracted from the principal material used to raise one of the tumuli of the Bronze Age barrow cemetery of Horodnic de Jos (Suceava Co.), investigated by the archaeologists of Suceava between 2012 and 2013. The authors' aim is to identify the source area of the raw material, on the basis of the thin microscopy sections of the samples. The final conclusions are that the dominant materials are the effusive rocks originating in the neogene volcanic rocks of the inner piedmont of the Eastern Carpathians, as well as the rocky intrusions within wildflysch formations (Hauterivian -- Albian) of the Rarau Syncline, located in the north-central area of the same mountain range. Both sources are located at around 150 km from the central part of the Suceava Plateau, where are located the archaeological sites out of which the samples were taken. Three of the analyzed axes are made of detritic sedimentary rocks originating in two different geostructural units -- the Moldavian Platform and the Carpathian Flysch -- easy to procure rocks even today, from outcrops or riverbeds. Concurrently, this analysis raises some issues: how well-structured a process was the prospection, extraction and shipment of raw material? Were there traveling craftsmen, production and distribution/redistribution centers for this type of artifacts? It is worth noting that a multitude of stone axes types, which cover chronologically almost 1500 years, and pertain culturally to different prehistoric civilizations, show the same area of origin for their raw material. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
44. Prehistoric Rock Structures of the Idaho National Laboratory
- Author
-
Pace, Brenda
- Published
- 2007
45. Excavations at a late antique to early Islamic pearling town and monastery on Sīnīya Island, Umm al-Quwain.
- Author
-
POWER, TIMOTHY, ESPOSTI, MICHELE DEGLI, HOYLAND, ROBERT, KANNOUMA, RANIA HUSSEIN, BORGI, FEDERICO, IWASZCZUK, URSZULA, MAINI, ELENA, NICOLOSI, TERESA, and PRIESTMAN, SETH
- Subjects
CONSTRUCTION materials ,POTTERY ,MERCHANTS ,URBANIZATION ,ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
Previous work on Sīnīya Island by the Tourism and Archaeology Department of Umm al-Quwain, in collaboration with its local and international research partners, revealed the existence of a Christian monastery dating broadly to the seventh and eighth centuries AD. The second season of the Sīnīya Island Archaeological Project continued work at the monastery and opened a new area of excavation in an associated settlement. The settlement constitutes a 10 ha area of dense mounding covered with building materials, pottery, glass, and shells. The ceramic assemblage and buildings typology indicate that the settlement is contemporary with the monastery. Excavations revealed a smaller number of large courtyard buildings surrounded by densely packed small double-roomed buildings, which we might interpret as the houses of merchants and fishermen. Evidence that pearling contributed to the economy was provided by oyster-shell middens, several pearls, and a pearl diver's weight -- the earliest well-dated example yet found in the Emirates. A picture is now emerging of a pearling town and nearby monastery that flourished between late antiquity and early Islam. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
46. Behind the camera, photographic approaches through the archive collection of AlUla Old Town.
- Author
-
CANAUD, HÉLÈNE, VERNET, APOLLINE, and KHAN, BÉNÉDICTE
- Subjects
DOCUMENTARY photography ,HISTORY of archives ,FAMILY archives ,HISTORIC sites ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL surveying ,PHOTOGRAPHY archives - Abstract
The aim of this article is to explore photographic practices in the documentation of AlUla Old Town since the beginning of the twentieth century, from the photographic collection in the AlUla Museum. In this way, one can follow the evolution of the heritage site throughout the last century and confront the different photographers' approaches through their documentary contribution. The earliest photographs are by Jaussen and Savignac, who explored the Old Town during their archaeological journey from Jerusalem to Medina. Since then, archive collections have increased in the AlUla Museum but remain overlooked. The early travellers' photographs from 1904 are contemporary with the explorations of Hejaz, which became more accessible via the railway for the Muslim pilgrimage. Among these pictures are archaeological survey documentation (e.g. Peter Parr in 1968) and photographic reporting for wider exploration of the region (Jamie Simson for the Robert Hurd Overseas society in the 1980s). The Museum collection also consists of several private donations and AlUli family archives (Omar Ali Alwan fond dated 1980), which document the recent history of the Old Town. These photographic testimonies provide a wide range of information, spreading from archaeology to ethnography. From archaeological documentation to personal photography, the study of these archives highlights the AlUla urban evolutions, questions the photographic intentions underlying their compositions, and draws attention to the documentary function of photography for heritage studies, in their tangible as much as their intangible aspects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
47. Procedural Generation of Traversable Buildings Outlined By Arbitrary Convex Shapes.
- Author
-
Adão, Telmo, Magalhães, Luís, Peres, Emanuel, and Pereira, Francisco
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,CULTURAL property ,PROPERTY damage ,BUILDING repair ,INDUSTRIAL costs - Abstract
Virtual reconstructions are commonly used in archaeology to represent cultural heritage monuments that had been lost or damaged by natural causes. Traditionally, these reconstructions require a huge number of human resources and large ranges of time, resulting in high costs of production. To tackle with this issue, many researchers developed semi-automatic techniques to produce virtual models expeditiously. These procedural techniques provide different ways of represent buildings, including interiors and outer facades, in an archaeological or modern context. However, the existing techniques focusing building interiors only support the production of virtual models composed mainly by regular shapes such as rectangles. In this paper it will be presented the first steps of a novel methodology to provide a solution for the generation of building interiors constrained by arbitrary convex shapes. This methodology uses a specific ontology with a set of rules in order to regulate the generation process. The sequence of steps includes the room placement and area definition, section cuts and area readjustments, room linking and finally the extrusions and roof placement to deliver the final 3D model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. UTILISATION OF LASER SCANNING FOR INVENTORY OF AN ARCHITECTURAL OBJECT USING THE EXAMPLE OF RUINS OF THE KRAKOW BISHOPS' CASTLE IN IŁŻA, POLAND.
- Author
-
Markiewicz, Jakub, Zawieska, Dorota, Kowalczyk, Michał, and Zapłata, Rafał
- Subjects
PHOTOGRAMMETRY ,MONUMENTS ,GEOMETRY ,CULTURAL property ,REMOTE sensing - Abstract
The terrestrial laser scanning with the close-range photogrammetry is now one of the most effective and most accurate, non-invasive methods of historic monuments inventory, especially during in-field archaeological and architectural works. In addition to the possibility of object's geometry registration, together with imaging documentation, the laser beam intensity of reflectance has recently become more important. It has been widely applied (as a complementary parameter) directly in the analytical works and monumental objects' surface detection, as well as, indirectly, during the diagnosis of the historical substance. The objective of this paper is to discuss selected issues related to performed field works concerning the ruins of the castle in Iłża, in Poland, which include acquisition and integration of data, as well as analysis and interpretation of the mentioned intensity of the reflectance parameter. The final result is the practical utilization of data for evaluation of behaviour of selected parts of a described object. Works are performed with the use of non-destructive methods of documenting and recognition of cultural resources, developed by the Stefan Wyszynski University in Warsaw within the research project "Utilisation of laser scanning and remote sensing for protection, investigations and inventory of the cultural heritage. Development of non-destructive, digital methods of documenting and recognition of resources of the architectural and archaeological heritage", within the programme of the Minister for Science and Higher Education, called "The National Programme for Development of Humanities". [6]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
49. LYTRO CAMERA TECHNOLOGY AND ITS USABILITY FOR CLOSE-RANGE PHOTOGRAMMETRY.
- Author
-
Šedina, Jaroslav, Bílá, Zdeňka, and Housarová, Eliška
- Subjects
DOCUMENTATION ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,PHOTOGRAMMETRY ,OPTICAL resolution ,DIGITAL images - Abstract
Beginning in the nineties, new technology for the documentation of archaeological and historical objects has been preferred in research. Very rapid development of the new technologies based on computer processing or computer-aided techniques with rapid digital camera development such as laser scanning meant a great change in general. The modern approach in spatial documentation deals with image-based modeling. There is a problem with the focusing of whole spatial objects. Non-sharp parts cannot be successfully processed to a precise point cloud or 3D model. So far, it has been necessary to capture spatial or significantly curved objects in small increments. Recently, there has been an evolving commercial market of plenoptic camera technology. Such a well-known product is the Lytro camera, a low-cost plenoptic camera. The main ability of this technology is to capture traces of light rays inside the camera. Due to this property of plenoptic cameras, we are able to produce images with extended depths of field. Photogrammetry has faced the image focus problem in the whole area since the beginning. The ability of creating images with an extended depth of field is suitable property for close range photogrammetry, where objects could be imaged in a very short distance. Low image resolution and the ability of producing images with an extended depth of field makes this technology usable for small object documentation. This paper will introduce the testing of this technology for the Czech Technical University in Prague for the documentation of small bronze archaeological findings. Images with an extended depth of field have been used as a base for the creation of 3D documentation of these archaeological findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
50. MOBILE MAPPING AND THE USE OF BACKSCATTER DATA FOR THE MODELLING OF INTERTIDAL ZONES OF BEACHES.
- Author
-
Stal, Cornelis, Incoul, Annelies, De Maeyer, Philippe, Deruyter, Greta, Nuttens, Timothy, and De Wulf, Alain
- Subjects
GEOMETRICAL optics ,OPTICAL resolution ,SCANNING systems ,INTERTIDAL zonation ,INTERDISCIPLINARY research - Abstract
Mobile mapping with laser scanning is frequently limited to the sole geometric reconstruction of objects or surfaces. In the special case of the construction of Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) of intertidal zone of beaches, this task is known to be very challenging. In the context of the interdisciplinary research project named 'SeArch', which aims at documenting and managing archaeological patrimony in the North Sea, a field campaign was organized in the summer of 2013. During this campaign, an amphibious vehicle (ARGO) was equipped with a Terrestrial Laser Scanner (TLS) in profiler mode, an Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU), a Real-Time Kinematic Global Navigation Satellite System (RTK GNSS) and a PC hydrographic data acquisition software and huge storage capacity. Based on previous research, this configuration appeared to have the best performance under the environmental conditions at the Belgian North Sea coast. Especially for the intertidal zones of beaches, the use of this mobile platform resulted in very promising results from a geometrical point of view. A summary of the results of the campaign is presented in this paper. Although the focus of this campaign was on the construction of DEMs with a high resolution and a high accuracy, the used Leica HDS 6200 phase-based laser scanner also returned a backscatter value for each measured point. A provisional analysis of these values suggested a relation between the physical properties of the reflecting surface and the registered backscatter values. However, earlier studies have also demonstrated the influence of the incidence angle and measured distance on this backscatter value. As will be discussed in this paper, a correction function can be defined that takes these parameters into account as weights for corrected backscatter data. In combination with the commonly used point cloud, the corrected values allow the calculation of false-color composites of the measured surface and the detection and description of features. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.