Managing Archaeological Data in the Digital Age: Best Practices and Realities

Reblogged from The Archaeology of the Mediterranean World:

This past week, Deb Brown, who co-organized our panel at the Archaeological Institute of America’s annual meeting made the talks available on the YouTubes.

All the papers were very solid on this panel and it provides a nice overview of the state of the field. I offered a reflection on the paper in their immediate aftermath here and have more to say on the topic in here…

Read more… 224 more words, 5 more videos

At the AIA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Deb Brown co-organized a session on managing archaeological data. The talks were recorded, and she has made them publicly available via YouTube. Bill Caraher, one of the speakers, has compiled them nicely within a single blog post.
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Free GIS workshop in Lancaster

Reblogged from Archaeological Networks:

Click to visit the original post

The Spatial Humanities team in Lancaster is organising a free two-day workshop in Geographic Information Systems (GIS) for postgraduate students and early career researchers. The intensive two-day course does not require any prior knowledge on GIS and will introduce you to its data management, mapping and export functionality. I can definitely recommend attending this workshop, the team in Lancaster is doing some great pioneering work in spatial humanities and will make sure you get excited by GIS too.

Read more… 487 more words

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Arches: Heritage Inventory & Management System

Arches is an open-source, web-based, geospatial information system for cultural heritage inventory and management. Purpose-built for the international cultural heritage field, Arches is designed to record all types of immovable heritage, including archaeological sites, buildings and other historic structures, landscapes, and heritage ensembles or districts. Read a joint statement from the leaders of the Getty Conservation Institute and World Monuments Fund, the organizations that have partnered to lead the development of Arches.

Filed under: Websites of Interest Tagged: heritage management, open source

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Digital Classicist London 2013: Call for Papers

From the Stoa Consortium:

Call for Papers

January 24th, 2013 by Gabriel Bodard

The Digital Classicist London seminar series, which provides a forum for research into the ancient world that employs digital research methods, invites submissions for Summer 2013.

We warmly welcome contributions from students as well as established researchers and practitioners. Themes could include digital text, semantics and linguistics, imaging and visualization, linked data, open access, geographic analysis, information science and serious gaming, although this list is by no means exhaustive. While we welcome high-quality application papers discussing individual projects and their immediate context, the series also hopes to accommodate broader theoretical consideration of the use of digital technology in ancient studies. Presentations should have an academic research agenda relevant both to classicists, ancient historians or archaeologists, and to information specialists or digital humanists.

The seminars will run on Friday afternoons at 16:30, from June to early August in the Institute of Classical Studies, Senate House, London. There is a budget to assist with travel to London (usually from within the UK, but please enquire if you’re coming from further afield).

To submit a paper for consideration for the Digital Classicist London Seminars, please email an abstract of 300-500 words togabriel.bodard@kcl.ac.uk, by midnight UTC on March 22nd, 2013.

More information will be found athttp://www.digitalclassicist.org/wip/wip2013.html

Filed under: Academia, Conferences, United Kingdom Tagged: classical archaeology, classics, geospatial, GIS, linked data, modeling, Topography, United Kingdom

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Workshop in Agent Based Modeling at CAA 2013

Preposted from the antiquistCAAworkshop_complexity_leaflet

Ever wondered what all this complex systems talk in archaeology is about, or how to design your own sophisticated simulation model? Then this might be for you:

We will organise a workshop on complex systems and agent-based simulations models in archaeology at the CAA Conference in Perth, Australia, this March. Places are still available but Early Bird Registration to the conference ends on Thursday February 7th, so hurry up to get a discount! The workshop itself is free of charge.

The workshop will take place on Monday March 25th and will consist of a morning and an afternoon session. At the end of the day you will be able to design and program your own simulation model to help you answer your research questions in archaeology or related social sciences – guaranteed …

Registration for the conference at:

http://www.caa2013.org/drupal/registration

Registration to the workshop will be announced on the CAA website soon, but you can already reserve a seat by contacting Carolin at cv275@cam.ac.uk

Hope to see you there.

Best wishes,

Carolin, Iza, Tom and Eugene

Carolin Vegvari (Department of Biological Anthropology, University of Cambridge)
Iza Romanowska (Institute for Complex Systems Simulation, University of Southampton)
Tom Brughmans (Archaeological Computing Research Group, University of Southampton)
Eugene Ch’ng (IBM Visual and Spatial Technology Centre, University of Birmingham)

Filed under: Conferences Tagged: agent based, GIS, modeling

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Graduate Symposium in GIS Applications in Archaeology

Middle East Technical University

Graduate Program in Settlement Archaeology Graduate Symposium Series 5

29-30 April 2013, METU Ankara

 

GIS Applications in Archaeology

Understanding  the distribution of material culture in time and space forms the basis of archaeological studies. While the typological analysis of material culture enables archaeologists to analyse societal changes within a chronological order, the study of artefacts in relation to space reveals the sorts of relationships between human beings and the natural environment as well as constructed space. These relationships can be analysed in a variety of scales ranging from singular to plural units, from domestic to urban space and within local or regional settlement contexts. In the past decade, the collection, storage, analyses and interpretation of archaeological data through the use of GIS applications have become an important tool. Today, while GIS has become the most commonly used tool for spatial documentation, its potential for cultural heritage management and conservation, the discovery of new archaeological sites, statistical analyses of archaeological data and space and modelling is very well recognized.

The Graduate Symposium series organized by the Graduate Program in Settlement Archaeology at the Middle East Technical University this year  invites papers on GIS Applications in Archaeology for its meeting on 28-29 April 2013. The symposium is open to any field of study pertaining to the topic. The applicants are expected to send an abstract of maximum 250 words to berciyas@metu.edu.tr until 1 March 2013. The applicants will be notified of the process by 5 March 2013.

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Ancient Geography Resources – repost from AWOL

In September, the Ancient World Online (AWOL) posted an annotated list of resources for ancient geography.  Better late than never, so here’s the link:

http://ancientworldonline.blogspot.com/2012/09/roundup-of-resources-on-ancient.html

Happy browsing!

Filed under: Websites of Interest Tagged: classical archaeology, GIS, Topography

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Some More Thoughts on Digital History

Reblogged from The Archaeology of the Mediterranean World:

Our panel yesterday on Managing Archaeological Data in a Digital Age was really nice. There was an engaged audience and a diverse but cohesive group of papers. What more could you want for a panel on the final day of the conference?

I won’t bother to sum up the paper in part because they should be made available before too long on the Youtubes or similar.

Read more… 699 more words

Bill Caraher provides some of his thoughts on the panel on archaeological data, presented on Sunday morning. Of possible to geospatial folks, as this invariably affects much of how we manage spatial data.
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AIA 2013 Meeting, Seattle WA

I am sitting in the Sheraton’s bar, watching the Seattle/Washington game (and geekily enough, blogging).  Will write a short note now, just to say that the times spent discussing the state of geospatial studies in archaeology formed some of the high points of these meetings.  A great, huge shout out to Ulrike Krotscheck, Diane Favro, Tom Elliott, and Ryan Hughes and other members of the Geospatial IG for a GREAT workshop on Saturday.  I will be compiling the notes from our time together, and will be posting them as a blogpost shortly.

Thanks to all who participated contributed to our discussions, and I wish you safe travels.

Filed under: Academia, Conferences Tagged: classical archaeology, geospatial, GIS

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Call for Papers: Digital Perspectives on the Classical World

CALL FOR PAPERS

Word, Space, Time: Digital Perspectives on the Classical World

An interdisciplinary conference organized by the Digital Classics Association

University at Buffalo, SUNY

Buffalo, NY 14261, USA

April 5 – 6, 2013

Archaeological GIS, digital historical mapping, literary text mining, and other computational techniques are increasingly shaping how we understand classical antiquity. Digital methods are breaking down sub-disciplinary barriers, allowing literary scholars to more easily explore epigraphical inscriptions, archaeologists to place their findings on digital historical maps, and philosophers to explore style and argument with sophisticated search techniques. Digital tools also offer new ways to explain aspects of classical antiquity in the classroom and to the public at large.

The aim of the inaugural Digital Classics Association (DCA) conference is to provide a survey of current approaches to digital methods of research, teaching, and outreach across classical sub-disciplines, with the goals of further opening inter-disciplinary perspectives and establishing common objectives for digital research and education.

Abstracts are invited from professional and independent scholars, graduate students, educators, and digital developers who engage with emerging digital methods in any area of classical antiquity. Abstract submitters should indicate whether they wish to present a poster or deliver a paper on a panel. Poster sessions can be on any digital classics topic. Abstracts for panels should indicate which of the following topics they will address:

  • Historical mapping
  • Literary and linguistic text mining
  • Literary criticism and digital methods
  • Textual corpora and conventions
  • Visualizing the built environment and lived space (including GIS applications)

Authors of abstracts should show innovation in one or more of the following areas: digital methods bearing on new or existing research questions, digital theory, or education / outreach.

Abstracts are also invited for 1-hour hands-on workshops on any topic. Possibilities include, but are not limited to: GIS methods, linguistic graphing with R, linked data, literary topic modeling, and spatial visualization. Presenters can give a workshop in addition to a paper or poster, in which case two abstracts should be submitted.

Please submit abstracts of no more than 300 words via the conference website http://classics.buffalo.edu/events/dcaconference/, which also contains further information about the conference.

The abstract receipt deadline isDecember 14, 2012. The deadline for conference registration is February 15, 2013.

Filed under: Academia, Conferences

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