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Documentation and Interpretation of an Archeological Excavation: an experience with Dense Stereo Reconstruction tools

Callieri, Marco ; Dell'Unto, Nicolo LU orcid ; Dellepiane, Matteo ; Scopigno, Roberto ; Söderberg, Bengt LU and Larsson, Lars LU (2011) VAST2011 International Symposium on Virtual Reality, Archaeology and Cultural Heritage p.33-40
Abstract
An archeological excavation is usually a rapidly evolving environment: several factors (weather, costs, permissions) force the work to be concentrated in a few weeks. Moreover, excavating is essentially a mono-directional operation, which constantly modifies the state of the site. Since most of the interpretation is performed in a second

stage, it is necessary to collect a massive amount of documentation (images, sketches, notes, measurements). In this paper we present an experiment of monitoring of an excavation in Uppåkra, South Sweden, using dense stereo

matching techniques. The archeologists were trained to collect a set of images every day; the set was used to produce a 3D model depicting the state of the excavation.... (More)
An archeological excavation is usually a rapidly evolving environment: several factors (weather, costs, permissions) force the work to be concentrated in a few weeks. Moreover, excavating is essentially a mono-directional operation, which constantly modifies the state of the site. Since most of the interpretation is performed in a second

stage, it is necessary to collect a massive amount of documentation (images, sketches, notes, measurements). In this paper we present an experiment of monitoring of an excavation in Uppåkra, South Sweden, using dense stereo

matching techniques. The archeologists were trained to collect a set of images every day; the set was used to produce a 3D model depicting the state of the excavation. In this way, it was possible to obtain a reliable geometric representation of the evolution of the excavation. The obtained model were also used by the archeologists, by the means of an open-source tool, to perform a site study and interpretation stage directly on the geometric data. The results of the experimentation show that dense stereo matching can be easily integrated with the daily work of archeologists in the context of an excavation, and it can provide a valuable source of data for interpretation, archival and integration of acquired material. (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
Digital Archaeology, Virtual Archaeology, Archaeology, Computer Vision, Image Based modelling, Dense Stereo Matching, Uppåkra, Archaeological Methodologies
host publication
[Host publication title missing]
editor
Dellepiane, Matteo ; Nicolucci, Franco ; Pena Serna, Sebastian ; Rushmeier, Holly and Van Gool, Luc
pages
7 pages
publisher
Eurographics - European Association for Computer Graphics
conference name
VAST2011 International Symposium on Virtual Reality, Archaeology and Cultural Heritage
conference location
Prato, Tuscany, Italy
conference dates
2011-10-18 - 2011-10-21
ISSN
1811-864X
ISBN
978-3-905674-34-7
project
The Uppåkra project
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
c6a83c74-1313-4a87-b76f-e35ef493d909 (old id 2062881)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 13:34:02
date last changed
2020-01-08 14:31:35
@inproceedings{c6a83c74-1313-4a87-b76f-e35ef493d909,
  abstract     = {{An archeological excavation is usually a rapidly evolving environment: several factors (weather, costs, permissions) force the work to be concentrated in a few weeks. Moreover, excavating is essentially a mono-directional operation, which constantly modifies the state of the site. Since most of the interpretation is performed in a second<br/><br>
stage, it is necessary to collect a massive amount of documentation (images, sketches, notes, measurements). In this paper we present an experiment of monitoring of an excavation in Uppåkra, South Sweden, using dense stereo<br/><br>
matching techniques. The archeologists were trained to collect a set of images every day; the set was used to produce a 3D model depicting the state of the excavation. In this way, it was possible to obtain a reliable geometric representation of the evolution of the excavation. The obtained model were also used by the archeologists, by the means of an open-source tool, to perform a site study and interpretation stage directly on the geometric data. The results of the experimentation show that dense stereo matching can be easily integrated with the daily work of archeologists in the context of an excavation, and it can provide a valuable source of data for interpretation, archival and integration of acquired material.}},
  author       = {{Callieri, Marco and Dell'Unto, Nicolo and Dellepiane, Matteo and Scopigno, Roberto and Söderberg, Bengt and Larsson, Lars}},
  booktitle    = {{[Host publication title missing]}},
  editor       = {{Dellepiane, Matteo and Nicolucci, Franco and Pena Serna, Sebastian and Rushmeier, Holly and Van Gool, Luc}},
  isbn         = {{978-3-905674-34-7}},
  issn         = {{1811-864X}},
  keywords     = {{Digital Archaeology; Virtual Archaeology; Archaeology; Computer Vision; Image Based modelling; Dense Stereo Matching; Uppåkra; Archaeological Methodologies}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{33--40}},
  publisher    = {{Eurographics - European Association for Computer Graphics}},
  title        = {{Documentation and Interpretation of an Archeological Excavation: an experience with Dense Stereo Reconstruction tools}},
  year         = {{2011}},
}