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Archaeological Prospection
Due to saving time and manpower, automatic and semi‐automatic methods can be used to identify and analyse ancient artefacts. Such methods are usually among the studies of neural networks and machine learning systems, which are carried out using remote ...
Fereshte Azarkhordad +3 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Due to saving time and manpower, automatic and semi‐automatic methods can be used to identify and analyse ancient artefacts. Such methods are usually among the studies of neural networks and machine learning systems, which are carried out using remote ...
Fereshte Azarkhordad +3 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Automatic Extraction of Petrographic Features from Pottery of Archaeological Interest
Journal on Computing and Cultural Heritage, 2015The microscopic description of ancient pottery is widely used for the fabric definition, classification and provenance assessment. In most cases, however, the description is qualitative. An improvement of the study of archaeological pottery needs a more objective approach with quantitative analysis.
Puglisi G +3 more
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Feature 4, Fairburn windfarm: Archaeological Evaluation
2008A4 Blue Spine unpublished client ...
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Automatic Shape Feature Recognition for Ceramic Finds
ACM Journal on Computing and Cultural Heritage, 2020Ceramic sherds are the most common finds in archaeology. They are complex to analyze and onerous to process. A large number of indistinct sherds coming from excavations must be preliminarily grouped in some categories.
L. Angelo +3 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Measurement of constant radius geometric features in archaeological pottery
Measurement, 2018Abstract Constant radius geometric features are a common type of manufacturing features of ancient ceramics. They are obtained by a sweeping action of a tool, which leaves negative or positive traces characterized by a cross-section with one or more constant radii.
Di Angelo, L. +3 more
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Social features, Spatial features, Time features: An urban archaeological data model
2008The use of GIS to study the spatial evolution of pre-industrial cities over the "longue durée" requires rigorous formalisation of heterogeneous data from different sources into robust entities. An initial model using the HBDS (Hypergraph Based Data Structure) method enabled us to distinguish social and spatial features.
Rodier, Xavier, Saligny, Laure
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Interpretation of archaeological small-scale features in spectral images
Journal of Archaeological Science, 2011The paper's focus is the use of spectral images for the distinction of small archaeological anomalies on the basis of the authors work. Special attention is given to the ground-truthing perspective in the discussion of a number of cases from Norway. Different approaches to pattern-recognition are considered in the light of the increasing availability ...
Grøn, Ole +5 more
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Medieval archaeological features at Dunglass Burn, Borders Region, Scotland
Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, 2008An assemblage of small archaeological features from an eroding coastal section on the Dunglass Burn, near Cockburnspath, in south-east Scotland is described. The immediacy of the threat from coastal storms necessitated a salvage excavation of the features, and because this approach may be increasingly needed given the impacts of global climate change ...
Richard Tipping, D Henderson
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Journal of medical entomology, 2018
Flies and beetles are the main components of the entomofauna colonizing a body after death. Following the recognition of constant and predictable colonization patterns and the knowledge about the dependence of the insect development to temperature, a new
G. Giordani, A. Grzywacz, S. Vanin
semanticscholar +1 more source
Flies and beetles are the main components of the entomofauna colonizing a body after death. Following the recognition of constant and predictable colonization patterns and the knowledge about the dependence of the insect development to temperature, a new
G. Giordani, A. Grzywacz, S. Vanin
semanticscholar +1 more source

