GCH 2018 - Eurographics Workshop on Graphics and Cultural Heritage
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Browsing GCH 2018 - Eurographics Workshop on Graphics and Cultural Heritage by Subject "Archaeology"
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Item Integrated Spatio-temporal Documentation and Analysis of Archaeological Stratifications Using the Harris Matrix(The Eurographics Association, 2018) Neubauer, Wolfgang; Traxler, Christoph; Lenzhofer, Andreas; Kucera, Matthias; Sablatnig, Robert and Wimmer, MichaelThe Harris Matrix (HM) is the fundamental diagrammatic representation of relative time for an archaeological site and the de facto standard for the representation of a stratigraphic sequence - the backbone for archaeological stratigraphy. It displays all uniquely identified units of stratification in a sequential diagram representing their relative temporal succession. The Harris Matrix Composer is a widely used application in the archaeological community to efficiently create and analyse HMs. However, it does not support explicit dating of HM units, which is an important information for post-excavation investigations of an archaeological site. In this paper we describe an integrated approach for a combination of stratigraphic and chronologic relations. The implicit, chronologic sequence given by the HM becomes explicit as scientists are enabled to define a hierarchical time model and assign units of the HM to temporal intervals or provide exact dating. The system maintains a consistent visual representation, which means that a correct stratigraphic layout is preserved while units are aligned to intervals of the time model. Evaluation of a real-world use case showed that this combined visualisation makes the scientific analysis and interpretation more efficient and reliable.Item Integrated Volume Visualisation of Archaeological Ground Penetrating Radar Data(The Eurographics Association, 2018) Bornik, Alexander; Wallner, Mario; Hinterleitner, Alois; Verhoeven, Geert; Neubauer, Wolfgang; Sablatnig, Robert and Wimmer, MichaelThe non-invasive prospection of our archaeological heritage is one of the main tasks of modern archaeology and often provides the necessary bases for further activities, such as special protection or intensified research. Geophysical prospections using ground-penetrating radar (GPR) are an invaluable tool for the non-destructive exploration of archaeological monuments still buried in the ground. However, the analysis and interpretation of the data sets generated in this way is a time-consuming and complex process and requires not only three-dimensional imagination but also a broad understanding of the archaeological remains. Therefore, understandable 3D visualisations are in great demand. This paper presents a novel integrated visualisation approach, which supports conjoint visualisation of scenes composed of heterogeneous data including GPR volumes and 3D models of interpretations and reconstructions. Visual depiction of relevant dataset areas and archaeological structures is facilitated based on flexible and localised visualisation techniques. Furthermore, the rendering system supports the computation of dynamic label layouts for scenes annotations.Item Virtual Restoration of Wooden Artifacts by Non-Rigid 3D Shape Assembly: A Case of the First Solar Boat of King Khufu(The Eurographics Association, 2018) Nemoto, Takashi; Kobayashi, Tetsuya; Oishi, Takeshi; Kagesawa, Masataka; Kurokochi, Hiromasa; Yoshimura, Sakuji; Ziddan, Eissa; Taha, Mamdouh; Sablatnig, Robert and Wimmer, MichaelIn this paper, we present a method to digitally reassemble an object to its original form given the 3D data of its component which are assumed to be non-rigidly deformed. Targeting wooden artifacts, we developed an algorithm to deform the components parametrically, and constraints based on the physical properties of wood are imposed on the deformation. We apply our method to a deformed cultural asset, specifically the first solar boat of King Khufu which is made of wood.