Digital Antiquity Publications and Reports
Digital Antiquity Publications and Reports includes Case Studies, Guidance, Technical Assistance, and other documents devoted to research and practice in the digital archiving of archaeological materials and archaeologically related data. This is an archival collection; the original publication series can be found on the Digital Antiquity website: https://live-digant.ws.asu.edu/.
Site Type Keywords
Rock Art
Other Keywords
digital curation •
Digital Preservation •
digital archaeology •
Digital Data Curation •
data integration •
digital data management •
Cultural Resource Management •
Synthesis •
Digital Archaeological Information •
tDAR
Culture Keywords
Hohokam •
Huhugam •
Ancestral Puebloan
Investigation Types
Heritage Management •
Methodology, Theory, or Synthesis •
Collections Research •
Archaeological Overview •
Records Search / Inventory Checking
Material Types
Fauna
Temporal Keywords
Classic •
Prehistoric •
Pre-Classic
Geographic Keywords
United States of America (Country) •
North America (Continent) •
Arizona (State / Territory) •
USA (Country) •
Arizona •
Phoenix Basin •
Delaware (State / Territory) •
Bermuda (Country) •
Virginia (State / Territory) •
District of Columbia (State / Territory)
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-31 of 31)
- Documents (31)
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Access, Use/Reuse, and Preservation of Data and Information Using tDAR (the Digital Archaeological Record) (2017)
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Like other public agencies, the US Army Reserve is responsible for the care of archaeological and cultural heritage resources on the facilities and land that they manage. Data and information about these resources also must be managed effectively for access, use, and sharing. This presentation illustrates how the tDAR repository is a tool that the US Army Reserve can use to meets its responsibilities. Use of tDAR also will make managing and using the data much more effective and...
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Beyond Archiving: Synthesizing Data with tDAR (2015)
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Archaeological projects generate abundant data that is often underutilized in research and analyses beyond the life of the project. Although some projects curate their data, they often do not make those data widely available, accessible, or easy to aggregate at comparable levels for additional research. Discipline specific digital repositories and data publishing platforms (e.g. tDAR, ADS, Open Context) are beginning to address problems related to the access and the utility of legacy databases...
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Communications Strategy for Promoting Synergy between the Academy and the CRM Industry (2019)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Francis McManamon
Syntheses of archaeological data have the potential to expand knowledge of the past and to advance public policy. For syntheses to be successful, they must include CRM data and must involve collaboration of CRM and academic archaeologists. By promoting data access and synthetic research, ACRA will effectively promote synergy between the academy and the CRM industry. Representing the industry, ACRA will encourage federal agencies at all levels to fulfill their legal responsibilities to make...
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Creating a Sustainable Domain Repository: tDAR (the Digital Archaeological Record) (2016)
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This tDAR record contains a summary of the presentation delivered at the 2016 SciDataCon held in Denver and a copy of the PPT slides used to illustrate the presentation. In recent decades, approximately 50,000 archaeological investigations have been conducted annually in the United States. Such field studies are required by archaeological and environmental laws and regulations. The term “cultural resource management” (CRM) describes the majority of these investigations. It is estimated that...
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Curating and Preserving Digital Archaeological Data: A Guide to Good Practice (Northwest Anthropological Conference) (2016)
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Archaeologists generate large numbers of digital materials during the course of field, laboratory, and records investigations. Maps, photographs, data analysis, and reports are often produced digitally. Good curation of digital data means it can be discovered and accessed, and preserving these materials means they are accessible for future use. In many ways the managing, curating and preserving digital materials involves similar steps as those taken with physical artifacts, samples, and paper...
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Curating and Preserving Digital Archaeological Data: A Guide to Good Practice (Plains Conference) (2016)
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Archaeologists generate large numbers of digital materials during the course of field, laboratory, and records investigations. Maps, photographs, data analysis, and reports are often produced digitally. Good curation of digital data means it can be discovered and accessed, and preserving these materials means they are accessible for future use. In many ways the managing, curating and preserving digital materials involves similar steps as those taken with physical artifacts, samples, and paper...
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Data Integration in the Service of Synthetic Research (2017)
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Addressing archaeology’s most compelling substantive challenges requires synthetic research that exploits the large and rapidly expanding corpus of systematically collected archaeological data. That, in turn, requires a means of combining datasets that employ different systematics in their recording while at the same time preserving the semantics of the data. To that end, we have developed a general procedure that we call query-driven, on-the-fly data integration that is deployed within the...
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Data Integration in the Service of Synthetic Research - SAA Vancouver Annual Meeting (2017)
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Addressing archaeology’s most compelling substantive challenges requires synthetic research that exploits the large and rapidly expanding corpus of systematically collected archaeological data. That, in turn, demands an integration procedure that preserves the semantics of the data when combining datasets collected by multiple investigators who employ different systematics in their recording. To that end, we have developed a general procedure that we call query-directed, on-the-fly data...
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Designing and Carrying Out Digital Curation for Data Management, Research, and Data Sharing (2018)
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This record describes a session at the 2018 Arizona Historic Preservation Conference that provided short presentations and a discussion on the curation of digital archaeological data and current practices to carry it out. The PPT slides by McManamon introduce the topic and the panelists. Doelle used a set of PPT slides, also provided here, to illustrate examples of the past use of large amounts of digital data to examine ancient coalescent communities and other Southwest social...
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Digital Antiquity and the Digital Archaeological Record (tDAR): Broadening Access and Ensuring Long-Term Preservation for Digital Archaeological Data (2010)
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Digital Antiquity was established in 2009 as an organization with two primary goals. One goal is to expand dramatically access to digital files related to a wide range of archaeological investigations and topics, e.g., archives and collections; field studies of various scales and intensities; and historical, methodological, synthetic, or theoretical studies (Digital Antiquity 2010). In order to accomplish this goal, Digital Antiquity maintains a repository for digital archaeological data. The...
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Digital Antiquity: Transforming Archaeological Data Into Knowledge (2010)
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Digital Antiquity (http://digitalantiquity.org) is a new organization dedicated to establishing an online digital repository of archaeological data and documents. Its primary goals are to expand dramatically access to the digital records of archaeological investigations and to ensure their long-term preservation. Through a web interface, users world- wide will be able to discover and download data and documents relevant to their research. Users also will upload their own data and documents along...
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The Digital Archive of Huhugam Archaeology (2018)
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The Digital Archive of Huhugam Archaeology is an ongoing NEH funded project designed to locate, digitize, and make publicly available in tDAR grey literature reports related to Huhugam archaeology and prehistory. We will apply advanced digital humanities techniques to maximize the synthetic potential of this massive digital database, with implications for improved archaeological research, indigenous access to their cultural heritage, cultural resource management, and public outreach. This...
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Digital Archive of Huhugam Archaeology (DAHA) 2022 SAA Poster (2022)
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The Center for Digital Antiquity at Arizona State University, in collaboration with the Amerind Museum, utilized a 2017 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to create a comprehensive digital library of archaeological investigations of the ancient Huhugam (Hohokam). The Digital Archive of Huhugam Archaeology (DAHA) now contains copies of more than 2,000 major archaeological reports, images and data sets made accessible through tDAR (the Digital Archaeological Record), an...
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Digital Archive of Huhugam Archaeology (DAHA): White Paper (2021)
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The Center for Digital Antiquity at Arizona State University, in collaboration with the Amerind Museum, utilized a 2017 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to create a comprehensive digital library of archaeological investigations of the ancient Huhugam (Hohokam). The Digital Archive of Huhugam Archaeology (DAHA) now contains copies of more than 2,000 major archaeological reports, images and data sets. It is curated and made accessible through tDAR (the Digital Archaeological...
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Digital Data Curation and Access: Why You and Your Organization Should be Actively Involved -- An ACRA White Paper (2019)
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Most are aware that the curation of archaeological and historical data and associated records has been a challenge for quite some time. Adequate curation of objects and associated records has received significant attention in the past two decades; however, professional archaeologists within academia, the Cultural Resources Management (CRM) industry, and federal and state agencies are keenly aware that we need to do more, if we are to successfully preserve our heritage, advance evidence-based...
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Enhancing Data Comparability and Enabling Synthesis with tDAR (the Digital Archaeological Record) (2013)
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The ability to easily compare and synthesize research results can have a huge impact on the productivity of a scientific research community. Meaningful comparisons across data sets created by different investigators demand both adequate documentation of the data semantics and the capacity to represent the data sets within a common schema. For research going forward, the adoption of standard terminologies and analytical procedures minimizes key problems of data comparability. Less obviously,...
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Evaluating a Cooperative Approach to the Management of Digital Archaeological Records (2014)
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The Department of Defense (DoD) needs efficient access to data from past archaeological investigations at its installations in order to avoid sudden, unpredicted site discoveries that delay mission-oriented activities, programs, and projects. The ECAMDAR project is a test case designed to evaluate whether and how an online repository for digital archaeological and cultural resource management (CRM) data and information developed and managed by the Center for Digital Antiquity (Digital Antiquity)...
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Evaluating a Cooperative Approach to the Management of Digital Archaeological Records (ECAMDAR): A Defense Legacy Project Assessing tDAR for the Department of Defense (2015)
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The Maryland Archaeological Conservation Laboratory (MAC Lab) and the Regional Archaeological Curation Laboratory (RACF) in Ft. Lee, Virginia are archaeological repositories that meet high professional standards for the care of artifacts and paper records. Unfortunately, neither facility has the expert technical staff and specialized infrastructure necessary to qualify as permanent repositories for digital records, despite the exponential rise in site documentation that exists in digital form...
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Good Digital Curation -- Best Practices (2015)
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Archaeology is awash in digital data. Archaeologists generate large numbers of digital files in their field, laboratory, and records investigations. We use digital mapping, digital photography, digital means of data analysis, and our reports are drafted and produced digitally. Good curation of digital data provides easy means by which it can be discovered and accessed, as well as ensuring that it is preserved for future uses. In many ways the planning for and carrying out good digital...
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Heritage in the Digital Age: Guidelines for Preserving and Sharing Heritage with Digital Techniques. (2016)
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This conference poster describes for individuals, organizations, and public agencies responsible for cultural heritage the challenges and opportunities that stewards of this important information face. Challenges include: heritage loss due to poor access and preservation; lack of perceived value; hesitancy to share information resulting in absence of public interest; and loss of heritage information through destruction or neglect. Digital techniques can provide access to information (with...
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Hidden Threat: Issues with Confidentiality and Protection of Digital Data (2018)
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With every trowel stroke, archaeologists expose layers of the past, allowing for the preservation of material while using destructive methods. Fortunately, with the formulation of research and documentation methods over the years, our destructive behavior has been offset with the increase of data and research possibilities. In more recent years, this data has taken on a digital format which has accumulated exponentially. As the amount of data produced from archaeological investigations increase...
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Making Data Free, Immediate, and Having Equitable Access: How Federal and State Agencies Work to Meet OSTP Governance through Responsible Curation and Preservation (2023)
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This is an abstract from the "SAA 2023: Individual Abstracts" session, at the 88th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. With the call from the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) to make federally-funded research openly and immediately available, many archaeologists, archivists, and CRM professionals in the U.S. are left wondering how this affects their research and ability to preserve and protect their data. Most affected by this governance are state and...
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Managing 'A Mountain' of Rock Art Digital Data (2015)
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Currently, rock art research generates large amounts of digital data, both un-structured and structured. This paper discusses the significant role that digital data management systems and repositories such as the Digital Archaeological Record (tDAR) can play in the examination, management, and long-term curation of these data. tDAR is a dynamic digital platform that allows archaeologists to conduct research with and manage their data. The paper describes how rock art researchers can use tDAR to...
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Probing, Publishing, and Promoting the Use of Digital Archaeological Data (2018)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Francis McManamon
On the wintery morning of 5 January 2018, the panelists in the scheduled session, “Probing, Publishing, and Promoting the Use of Digital Archaeological Data,” at the 119th Annual Meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America and a small, but engaged audience participated in the session. Unfortunately, the blizzard conditions of the day, and “severe winter weather” warnings of the previous day prevented more of the panelists and potential audience members from attending. In Boston, the...
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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...
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Security and Confidentiality of Data in tDAR (2017)
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The Center for Digital Antiquity (Digital Antiquity) strives to protect and preserve the archaeological and cultural heritage data and information that is deposited in tDAR. We focus on preserving, curating, and maintaining these data. We accept this responsibility as one of our primary missions. This document outlines the various approaches we take to store and secure digital information. We also describe tDAR features that allow data contributors to control and manage access to information...
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Sharing Curation Expertise and Space for Digital Archaeological Data (2018)
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Archaeologists are busy all the time. Often stretching to meet a variety of professional obligations. CRM and government agency archaeologists are among the most stretched given the different directions that pull upon their professional lives. Scholarly pursuits; administrative, bureaucratic, regulatory, and public outreach responsibilities related to physical sites and collections, easily fill or over-fill their schedules. Now the care and curation of digital data adds to the piling up of...
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Success Stories: the Digital Archaeological Record (tDAR), a Repository with Innovative Solutions for Public Outreach, Education, and Research (2016)
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Archaeological collections take on many forms, and increasingly include significant digital components. Many archaeologists, repositories, and other managers of cultural heritage and archaeological collections are not equipped to successfully care for digital collections; at worst, placing the information at risk of permanent loss, and at best making it more difficult to access and use for research, education, and public outreach. The Digital Archaeological Record (tDAR) is an online...
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Synthesizing Legacy Data : Using tDAR’s Data Integration Tool (2015)
DOCUMENT Full-Text
Archaeological projects generate abundant data that is often underutilized in research and analyses beyond the life of the project. Although some projects curate their data, they often do not make those data widely available, accessible, or easy to aggregate at different granularities for additional research. Discipline specific digital repositories and data publishing platforms (e.g. tDAR, ADS, Open Context) are beginning to address problems related to the access and the utility of legacy...
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Taking CARE to Make tDAR FAIR (2023)
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This is an abstract from the "SAA 2023: Individual Abstracts" session, at the 88th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. Every archaeological site holds the potential to contribute its own irreplaceable piece into the vast jigsaw puzzle that is our shared human past. Meticulous field and lab procedures ensure data and subsequent reports are accurate. But what happens after the project closes? For decades, it has been standard practice to file the report away into an...
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Update: The Digital Archive of Huhugam Archaeology (2021)
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This is a presentation from the 2021 Arizona Archaeological Council (AAC) Fall symposium on "The Archaeology of Canals in the Arizona Desert". Staff from the Center for Digital Antiquity will provide an update on the Digital Archive of Huhugam Archaeology (DAHA), which contains over 2000 digital datasets, documents, reports and images focused on the ancient Huhugam (1500 B.C. – 1450 A.D.) of the southwestern U.S. These files are primarily “grey literature,” that is, unpublished reports and...