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  1. Digital archaeology

    Digital archaeology is the application of information technology and digital media to archaeology. This includes the use of tools such as databases, 3D models, digital photography, virtual reality, augmented reality, and geographic information systems. Computational archaeology, which covers computer-based analytical methods, can be considered a subfield of digital archaeology, as can virtual archaeology. Digital archaeology plays a key role in data collection, analysis, and public outreach, enhancing the study and preservation of archaeological sites and artifacts. The use of digital technology to conduct archaeological research allows data to be collected without the invasion or destruction of archaeological sites and the cultural heritage they hold, aiding the preservation of archaeological data. This is how many early archaeological sites were discovered in-depth. Wikipedia

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  2. en.wikipedia.org

    Digital archaeology is the application of information technology and digital media to archaeology. [1] [2] This includes the use of tools such as databases, 3D models, digital photography, virtual reality, augmented reality, and geographic information systems. [3]Computational archaeology, which covers computer-based analytical methods, can be considered a subfield of digital archaeology, as ...
  3. digitalarchaeology.org.uk

    The Institute for Digital Archaeology

    digitalarchaeology.org.uk

    Conferences Authenticity in the Age of Iteration 2024 Totemic Timekeepers 2023 Memory, Denial, Repetition & Revenge 2022 Voices from the past 2021 Samarkand Summit 2020 Ancient Spice 2019 Portable Heritage 2018 Architecture of Memory 2017 World Heritage Strategy Forum 2016 Digital Imaging in Archaeology 2015; Elgin Marbles
  4. core.tdar.org

    The Digital Archaeological Record

    https://core.tdar.org

    The Digital Archaeological Record (tDAR) is the digital repository of Digital Antiquity, an organization devoted to enhancing preservation and access to digital records of archaeological investigations. tDAR is a national/international digital repository for archaeological information, including databases, reports, images, and other kinds of archaeological information. tDAR is a database of ...
  5. annualreviews.org

    Digital archaeology is both a pervasive practice and a unique subdiscipline within archaeology. The diverse digital methods and tools employed by archaeologists have led to a proliferation of innovative practice that has fundamentally reconfigured the discipline. Rather than reviewing specific technologies, this review situates digital archaeology within broader theoretical debates regarding ...
  6. en.wikipedia.org

    The Institute for Digital Archaeology (IDA) is a joint venture between Harvard University, Oxford University, and the Museum of the Future (Dubai) that promotes the development and use of digital imaging techniques in archaeology, epigraphy, art history, and museum conservation. The IDA creates digital archives that aid in interdisciplinary collaboration and the crowdsourcing of research. [1]
  7. digitalarchaeology.org.uk

    The Institute for Digital Archaeology

    digitalarchaeology.org.uk › our-purpose

    Digital archaeology represents the natural evolution of classical archaeology, permitting researchers to look at ancient objects in entirely new ways -- to uncover hidden inscriptions, invisible paint lines, the faintest palimpsests -- and to share these discoveries with the world. Beyond that, digital technologies can put these crucially ...
  8. archaeology.harvard.edu

    Smith was privileged to be a participant in the 2015-2016 NEH-funded Institute on Digital Archaeology Method and Practice. Knowledge acquired through the Institute along with continued self-directed training in programming, database design, open data, and digital preservation propels her continued research and application of technologies in low ...
  9. academic.oup.com

    Extract. Archaeology has a history of working with computation and digital technology that stretches back more than sixty years. While there are several examples from the late 1960s, including George L. Cowgill's "Computer Applications in Archaeology" (in Computers and the Humanities, Sept. 1967, pp. 17-23), one of the best known comes courtesy of James Deetz's seminal work on Arikara ...
  10. bassconnections.duke.edu

    Multispectral UAVs in Classical Archaeology: The Case of Vulci (abstract submitted to Archaeological Institute of America, 2017) Vulci 3000: 2017 Excavation Report (abstract submitted to Archaeological Institute of America, 2018) Vulci, A Digital Perspective (edited by Maurizio Forte and Helena Murteira in Digital Cities, Oxford University Press)
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