New Ways of Seeing the Past: Using New Technologies in Archaeology
Part of: Society for Historical Archaeology 2014
New advances in technology can provide historical archaeologists with new ways of, quite literally, seeing the past. The papers in this session discuss the creation of applications adapted to mobile telephone and tablet technology as well as the use of 3-D scanning and photography, GIS and the creation of virtual landscapes.
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-10 of 10)
- Documents (10)
- 3D Virtual Landscape Analysis at Fort Ethan Allen, VA (2014)
- 3D Virtual Landscape Analysis of 18th-century Settlement in the Swedes Tract, PA (2014)
- Archeology and 3D photography (2014)
- Battle of the Wabash 1791 - Using Archaeological results to support GIS Data Modeling and further Historical Research (2014)
- The CARE database (Corpus Architecturae religiosae Europeae / CARE - IV-X saec.), a new scientific tool for understanding The Early medieval Europe (2014)
- Creating a Digital Landscape: GIS Analysis of the Front Yard at James Madison’s Montpelier (2014)
- From Multimedia to Transmedia Experiences in the Interpretation of Heritage: The Mobile Application of Quebec City’s Tangible and Intangible Cultural Heritage (2014)
- Heritage Conservation Matters During the Last Decades in Eastern Romania. A Case Study from Iasi County (2014)
- Historical Ecology for Risk Management (2014)
- Scan 3D et archéologie : bilan de 10 ans d’expérimentations et de réalisations au Québec (2014)