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3D Laser Scanning in Cave Environment: the Case of Las Cuevas, Belize

Lindgren, Stefan LU and Galeazzi, Fabrizio (2013) Digital Heritage international congres p.219-222
Abstract
The Las Cuevas site is a Maya administrative and ceremonial center active during the latter part of the Late Classic period (700-900 AD) in Western Belize. It is of particular interest because a large cave resides directly beneath the largest temple in the site core. This paper presents the use of phase shift variation laser scanning technology (Faro Focus 3D) for the acquisition of the cave’s network of galleries (9 chambers) and a large excavation area (8x5 m) investigated in the entrance chamber in the summer of 2012. More than 300 scans were made to acquire the entire cave and the amount of 3D data collected was more than 400 GB. The creation of different level of details allowed the alignment and triangulation of the 3D models of the... (More)
The Las Cuevas site is a Maya administrative and ceremonial center active during the latter part of the Late Classic period (700-900 AD) in Western Belize. It is of particular interest because a large cave resides directly beneath the largest temple in the site core. This paper presents the use of phase shift variation laser scanning technology (Faro Focus 3D) for the acquisition of the cave’s network of galleries (9 chambers) and a large excavation area (8x5 m) investigated in the entrance chamber in the summer of 2012. More than 300 scans were made to acquire the entire cave and the amount of 3D data collected was more than 400 GB. The creation of different level of details allowed the alignment and triangulation of the 3D models of the different chambers and units. The dimension (24x20x10 cm; 5 kg) and accuracy (± 2 mm at 10-25 m) of the laser scanner allowed complete documentation of the cave and units in just three weeks of work. The importance of this work relies on the possibility to use the processed data to systematically improve the archaeological understanding of Las Cuevas’ complex cave system, favoring the interpretation of socio-cultural dynamics linked to cave environments during the Late Classic. The use of 3D technologies can, in fact, help the understanding of how the space in the cave was used in the past for rituals and ceremonies. Moreover, the 3D millimetric reproduction of the excavation process linked to the 3D survey of the entire cave will be instrumental for the archaeological record’s preservation. Future scholars will have the opportunity to retrace the work made by archaeologists at Las Cuevas, starting new discussion and interpretations of the same 3D archaeological context. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Phase shift variation laser scanner, 3D documentation, Archaeological excavation, Cave, Interpretation
host publication
2013 Digital Heritage International Congress
editor
Addison, Alonzo C. ; De Luca, Livio ; Guidi, Gabriele and Pescarin, Sofia
pages
4 pages
publisher
IEEE - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
conference name
Digital Heritage international congres
conference dates
2013-10-28
external identifiers
  • scopus:84896756390
ISBN
978-1-4799-3169-9
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
2a229fb6-34e3-4914-964f-366ff3372de5 (old id 4128286)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 10:46:49
date last changed
2022-03-31 17:21:57
@inproceedings{2a229fb6-34e3-4914-964f-366ff3372de5,
  abstract     = {{The Las Cuevas site is a Maya administrative and ceremonial center active during the latter part of the Late Classic period (700-900 AD) in Western Belize. It is of particular interest because a large cave resides directly beneath the largest temple in the site core. This paper presents the use of phase shift variation laser scanning technology (Faro Focus 3D) for the acquisition of the cave’s network of galleries (9 chambers) and a large excavation area (8x5 m) investigated in the entrance chamber in the summer of 2012. More than 300 scans were made to acquire the entire cave and the amount of 3D data collected was more than 400 GB. The creation of different level of details allowed the alignment and triangulation of the 3D models of the different chambers and units. The dimension (24x20x10 cm; 5 kg) and accuracy (± 2 mm at 10-25 m) of the laser scanner allowed complete documentation of the cave and units in just three weeks of work. The importance of this work relies on the possibility to use the processed data to systematically improve the archaeological understanding of Las Cuevas’ complex cave system, favoring the interpretation of socio-cultural dynamics linked to cave environments during the Late Classic. The use of 3D technologies can, in fact, help the understanding of how the space in the cave was used in the past for rituals and ceremonies. Moreover, the 3D millimetric reproduction of the excavation process linked to the 3D survey of the entire cave will be instrumental for the archaeological record’s preservation. Future scholars will have the opportunity to retrace the work made by archaeologists at Las Cuevas, starting new discussion and interpretations of the same 3D archaeological context.}},
  author       = {{Lindgren, Stefan and Galeazzi, Fabrizio}},
  booktitle    = {{2013 Digital Heritage International Congress}},
  editor       = {{Addison, Alonzo C. and De Luca, Livio and Guidi, Gabriele and Pescarin, Sofia}},
  isbn         = {{978-1-4799-3169-9}},
  keywords     = {{Phase shift variation laser scanner; 3D documentation; Archaeological excavation; Cave; Interpretation}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{219--222}},
  publisher    = {{IEEE - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.}},
  title        = {{3D Laser Scanning in Cave Environment: the Case of Las Cuevas, Belize}},
  year         = {{2013}},
}