Cyberinfrastructure (Other Keyword)

1-4 (4 Records)

Big Data, Human Adaptation, and Historical Archaeology: Confronting Old Problems with New Solutions (2016)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Jeffrey Altschul.

How humans respond to climate change has been identified as one of archaeology's grand challenges. Traditionally, archaeologists correlate local or regional environmental reconstructions with human settlement to form post hoc inferences about adaptive and social responses to changes in climate and associated environmental resources. Regardless the logical strength of these explanations, rarely can they be generalized beyond the case study. To offer general statements about human adaptation to...


Cultural Dynamics, Deep Time, and Data: Planning Cyberinfrastructure Investments for Archaeology (2014)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Keith Kintigh. Jeffrey Altschul. Ann P. Kinzig. Fred Limp. William Michener. J. A. Sabloff. Edward Hackett. Timothy A. Kohler. Bertram Ludäscher. Clifford Lynch.

Archaeological data and research results are essential to addressing such fundamental questions as the origins of human culture; the origin, waxing, and waning of civilizations and cities; the response of societies to long-term climate changes; and the systemic relationships implicated in human-induced changes in the environment. However, we lack the capacity for acquiring, managing, analyzing, and synthesizing the large data sets needed to address these fundamental questions. We propose...


Current developments in cyber-infrastructure in European archaeology (2016)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Julian Richards. Franco Niccolucci.

This is a pdf copy of the PPT slides used for this presentation in the SAA symposium. In Europe, as in North America, there has been little attention to the long term issues of digital data curation, with consequent risks of catastrophic data loss. In recent years, however, there has been mounting pressure on government agencies and universities to ensure that the research they fund, and the underlying data, are properly managed, and are available ‘Open Access’. Consequently, several European...


The Promise and Challenge of Archaeological Data Integration (2006)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Keith Kintigh

This forum reports the results of a National Science Foundation-funded workshop that focused on the integration and preservation of digital databases and other structured data derived from archaeological contexts. The workshop concluded that for archaeology to achieve its potential to advance long-term, scientific understandings of human history, there is a pressing need for an archaeological information infrastructure that will allow us to archive, access, integrate, and mine disparate data...