The Oseberg ship. Long-term physical-mechanical monitoring in an uncontrolled RH exhibition environment. : analytical results and hygromechanical modeling
(2013) p.283-297- Abstract
- A continuous monitoring system was installed on the Oseberg ship, a large Viking Age archaeological wooden object (oak), in order to determine the material response to the uncontrolled conditions at the Viking Ship Museum, Oslo, Norway. Four areas have been monitored since July 2009, two boards on the ship and two samples free to deform (recent oak and a sample removed from the ship). Results, reported for 2010/11, showed that extent of deformation is related to extent of restraint. The greatest extent of strain (warping) was found for the recent oak sample, followed by the unrestrained archaeological sample. Of the restrained samples, that with greatest loading showed least strain.
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/09d1b61d-8686-4734-b88a-76bb8926c8d3
- author
- Dionisi-Vici, Paolo ; Allegretti, Ottaviano ; Braovic, Susan ; Hjulstad, Guro ; Jensen, Maria LU and Storbekk, Elin
- publishing date
- 2013
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- host publication
- Climate for Collections Standards and Uncertainties Munich 2012
- editor
- Ashley-Smith, Jonathan ; Burmester, Andreas and Eibl, Melanie
- pages
- 283 - 297
- publisher
- Doerner-Institut
- ISBN
- 978-3-00-042252-2
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- no
- id
- 09d1b61d-8686-4734-b88a-76bb8926c8d3
- date added to LUP
- 2024-03-11 10:25:22
- date last changed
- 2024-03-11 13:47:53
@inproceedings{09d1b61d-8686-4734-b88a-76bb8926c8d3, abstract = {{A continuous monitoring system was installed on the Oseberg ship, a large Viking Age archaeological wooden object (oak), in order to determine the material response to the uncontrolled conditions at the Viking Ship Museum, Oslo, Norway. Four areas have been monitored since July 2009, two boards on the ship and two samples free to deform (recent oak and a sample removed from the ship). Results, reported for 2010/11, showed that extent of deformation is related to extent of restraint. The greatest extent of strain (warping) was found for the recent oak sample, followed by the unrestrained archaeological sample. Of the restrained samples, that with greatest loading showed least strain.}}, author = {{Dionisi-Vici, Paolo and Allegretti, Ottaviano and Braovic, Susan and Hjulstad, Guro and Jensen, Maria and Storbekk, Elin}}, booktitle = {{Climate for Collections Standards and Uncertainties Munich 2012}}, editor = {{Ashley-Smith, Jonathan and Burmester, Andreas and Eibl, Melanie}}, isbn = {{978-3-00-042252-2}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{283--297}}, publisher = {{Doerner-Institut}}, title = {{The Oseberg ship. Long-term physical-mechanical monitoring in an uncontrolled RH exhibition environment. : analytical results and hygromechanical modeling}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/173624644/Oseberg_ship_Climate_for_collections_2013.pdf}}, year = {{2013}}, }