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Ariadne
CAA Annual General Meeting
Coffe breake
Conference opening
Excursions
implications and solutions
Keynote speech
Lunc
Lunch breake
new perceptions
Posters
S02 Using GIS modeling to solve real-world archaeological problems
S03 Exploring Maritime Spaces with Digital Archaeology: Modelling navigation...
S04 Databases and archives: How do we handle the digital archives?
S05 Unstable futures-potential pasts: Scenarios for digital computing 2020
S06 Computer tools for depicting shape and detail in 3D archaeological models
S07 Integrating 3D photogrammetric data in the field: Challenges
S08 Modelling approaches to analyse the socio-economic context in archaeology II: Defining the limits of production
S09 Archaeological Information Languages and Notations
S10 Theorising the Digital: Digital Theoretical Archaeology Group (digiTAG) and the CAA
S11 Supporting researchers in the use and re-use of archaeological data: Continuing the ARIADNE thread
S12 Documentation interpretation and communication of Digital Archaeological Heritage
S13 Computational approaches to ancient urbanism: Documentation analysis and interpretation
S14 Can you model that? Applications of complex systems simulation to explore the past
S15 Interpretations from digital sensations? Using the digital sensory turn to discover new things about the past
S16 Networking the past: Towards best practice in archaeological network science
S17 The road not taken: Modelling approaches to transport on local and regional scales
S19 New technologies and archeology : The impact of the digital revolution
S20 Computer vision vs human perception in remote sensing image analysis: Time to move on
S21 Linked pasts: Connecting islands of content
S22 Teaching archaeology in the digital age. UISPP official session
S23 Needles in the haystack: Geophysical methods in challenging conditions
S24 Digital rock art documentations
S25 Public archaeology and the use of digital platforms
S26 The portable XRF revolution: Elemental analysis for all?
S27 Revealing by visualising: Geographic relations in cultural heritage databases
S28 Methodology of archaeological simulation. Meeting of the Special Interest Group in Complex Systems Simulation
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Monday
, March 28
St. Olavs gate 29
09:00 •
W1 Agent-based modelling under the auspices of the CAA special interest group Complex Systems Simulation
Tuesday
, March 29
Domus Academica, Theologisk eksamenssal
10:00 •
W5 3D: Drones in archaeology
Domus Bibliotheca
09:00 •
Ariadne AGM
Domus Media, Auditorium 13
09:00 •
W3 Improving presentation skills
Frokostkjelleren
20:00 •
Conference pub at The Frokostkjeller'n
Historisk museum
18:00 •
Icebreaker party
On your own
12:10 •
Lunch break (on your own)
Professorboligen, stallen
09:00 •
W2 Introduction to exploratory network analysis for archaeologists using Visone Track Workshops
12:30 •
W4 Photogrammetry in archaeology: Introduction to applications and practices for novices
St. Olavs gate 29
09:00 •
W1 Agent-based modelling under the auspices of the CAA special interest group Complex Systems Simulation
Wednesday
, March 30
Coffee point
10:10 •
Coffee break
15:10 •
Coffee break
Domus Academica, Gamle festsal
10:30 •
S12-01 Multi-shape archaeological modeling and communication
10:55 •
S12-02 A methodology for the analysis of graphical representations in archaeology and some preliminary results
11:45 •
S12-04 Emerging technologies for archaeological heritage: Knowledge, digital documentation, communication
13:30 •
S12-05 Towards a European standard for spatial data management for archaeological heritage: Experiences in France and Italy
13:55 •
S12-06 Comprehensive field survey: Multidisciplinary approach for a field prospection
14:20 •
S12-07 New actualities for Mediterranean ancient theatres: The Athena Project lesson
15:55 •
S12-10 Multimodal data fusion for the non-destructive assessment of the Baptistery di San Giovanni in Florence, Italy
16:20 •
S12-11 The Exedra of Goreme OAM: An ocean of points to be explored
16:45 •
S12-12 Enhancing archaeological interpretation with volume calculations. An integrated method of 3D recording and modeling
Domus Academica, Theologisk eksamenssal
10:30 •
S07-01 RAPID Aerial Scanning of UNESCO cultural heritage sites in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
10:55 •
S07-02 Digital workflow on a selection of Danish excavations in the Århus area―With special emphasis on the use of 3D recording
11:20 •
S07-03 The 3D photogrammetry documentation of the Mesolithic grave from Brunstad, Norway
11:45 •
S07-04 Using 3D photogrammetry in the field: An example from Kvåle Sogndal, Norway
13:30 •
S07-05 Supercomputing at the trench edge: Expediting image based 3D recoding
13:55 •
S07-06 Creation of an Early 19th century Siberian ship 3D model
14:20 •
S07-07 3D spatial analysis: Beyond extrusion and sectioning
14:45 •
S07-08 Enhancing evidence and re-evaluating interpretations with 3DGIS and image-based 3D replicas: The case of Borggade (Denmark)
15:30 •
S07-09 In the fields and on the screens. 3D documentation for the excavations at Paphos Agora, Cyprus
15:55 •
S07-10 Closing a gap with simple toy. How using a tablet affected documentation workflow on the Rozprza ring-fort excavation
16:20 •
S07-11 The documentation of Neolithic flint mines―An experimentation of methods
16:45 •
S07-12 Back and Forth through the contexts: 3D Geographic Information Systems in support of field documentation
Domus Bibliotheca
10:30 •
S21-01 An ontology for a numismatic island with bridges to others
10:55 •
S21-02 A Linked (Open) Data hub at the Norwegian Directorate for Cultural Heritage: A case study
11:20 •
S21-03 Linking periods: Modeling and utilizing spatio─temporal concepts in the chronOntology project
11:45 •
S21-04 The Matrix: Connecting time and space with archaeological research questions involving spatio─temporal phenomena and the conceptual relationships between them
13:30 •
S21-05 When data meets the enterprise. How we turned a merger of organisations into a confluence of information
13:55 •
S21-06 Where is the House of the Dwarves? Enhancing granularity in the Pleiades Gazetteer: The examples of ancient Sicily and Pompeii
14:20 •
S21-07 LOD for Numismatic LAM Integration
14:45 •
S21-08 Pelagios Commons: Decentralizing the Web of historical data
15:30 •
S27-01 GIS-based data integration for mapping paleoenvironments
15:55 •
S27-02 Endangered archaeology in the Middle East and North Africa: The development of a spatial database
16:20 •
S27-03 Management of raster data and their dynamic visualization within the ROCEEH─ROAD System
16:45 •
S27-04 Vertical aspects of Stone Age distribution in Norwegian high mountains
Domus Media, Auditorium 13
10:30 •
S22-01 Dynamic process, static document. How to solve the teacher’s baffling problem?
10:55 •
S22-02 ArGO. Archaeological Geocaching Online. Teaching and learning archaeology with geocaching
11:20 •
S22-03 When I was a child, I wanted to be an archaeologist. What about now? A French case study
11:45 •
S22-04 Towards the integration of green and cultural heritage management. Developing content for blended learning
13:30 •
S22-05 Archaeological education for a digital world: Case studies from the contemporary and historical US
13:55 •
S22-06 Digital data recording at Circus Maximus: A recent experience
15:30 •
S17-01 Transport and trade: An energyscape model and transport network approach for trade in Roman times
15:55 •
S17-02 A network model for the evolution of terrestrial connections in Central Italy (1175/1150─500 BC ca)
16:45 •
S17-04 Comparison of regional and local transport networks in 17th and 19th century AD pre-colonial stone-walled structures in the southern Gauteng Province, South Africa
Domus Media, Aula foyer
17:10 •
S07-P2 Questions and bottlenecks: The precariousness of computation heavy documentation in the field
17:10 •
S19-P4 Why 3D printing technique is the useful tool for artifact conservation
17:10 •
S25-P1 WW2 remains as cultural heritage
17:10 •
S11-P1 Combining analytical and digital data in archaeology: Towards a multidisciplinary ontological solution. The Salamis terracottas case study
17:10 •
S16-P1 Artificial Neural Networks to estimate Paleotemperatures in North Patagonia (Argentina) based on micromammals sequences
17:10 •
S13-P2 Geographical and cultural networks to better understand urbanization processes in central Italy (1175/1150─500 BC ca)
17:10 •
S04-P3 Bioarchaeology module―Loading please hold... Recording human bioarchaeological data from Portuguese archaeological field reports
17:10 •
S04-P1 Modelling between digital and humanities: Thinking in practice
17:10 •
S03-P2 Exploitation of prevailing winds and currents by the earliest known seafarers, reaching and colonizing Australasia c 50 000 years ago
17:10 •
S26-P1 A multidisciplinary project for the study of historical landscapes: New archaeological and physicochemical data from the “Colline Metallifere” district
17:10 •
S24-P1 New eyes to old graphics. Rock art in the Emirate of Sharjah
17:10 •
S03-P3 Using GIS modeling to reconstruct the urban landscape of the Roman city of Ossonoba
17:10 •
S25-P2 Archives, archaeology, and architecture: A multimedia approach for 3D reconstructions
17:10 •
S13-P1 Forum Boarium survey
17:10 •
S22-P1 Teaching GIS in archaeology: What Students focus on
17:10 •
S14-P1 The origins of agriculture: Mathematical models, cooperation and the rise of social inequality
17:10 •
S12-P1 How to classification?―A trial examining the effectiveness of an elliptic Fourier descriptor for Japanese archaeological studies
17:10 •
S19-P1 From the field to the showroom: The Augmented─Reality Kilns ExhibitiOn (ARKEO)
17:10 •
S13-P3 Patterns and recognition: Mapping indigenous settlement topography in the Caribbean
17:10 •
S07-P1 Underwater archaeological remains open to the public diving –close range photogrammetry as a digital preservation and complex documentations of despairing relicts
17:10 •
S19-P2 Roman archaeology and GIS visibility studies
17:10 •
S04-P2 Sustainability = separation: Keeping database structure, domain structure and interface independent
17:10 •
S03-P4 The first web based viewer for archaeological underwater sites in Europe: The Splashcos─Viewer
17:10 •
S23-P1 Comparing 3D Ground Penetrating Radar visualization methods: A case study from Austria
17:10 •
S25-P3 Doha Online Historical Atlas―GIS interactive mapping of space and time in a pearling town
17:10 •
S12-P2 Urbanism in the Cilician Plain from Chalcolithic to Byzantine Period
Domus Media, Aulaen
08:30 •
Conference opening
09:00 •
Keynote speech
10:30 •
S11-01 Introduction
10:55 •
S11-02 Methodological tips for mappings to CIDOC CRM
11:20 •
S11-03 An essay of mapping archaeological land-record system used by Inrap with CIDOC─CRM and CIDOC─CRMarchaeo extension using 3M online tool
11:45 •
S11-04 Formalisation and reuse of methodological knowledge on archaeology across European organisations
13:30 •
S11-05 Semantic database applications at the Samtavro Cemetery, Georgia
13:55 •
S11-06 A Catalog for archaelogical resources
14:20 •
S11-07 Using semantic technologies for the deep integration of research items in ARIADNE
14:45 •
S11-08 Fasti surveys
15:55 •
S11-10 Best practices to re-use remote sensing data coming from marine geophysical surveys for the 3D reconstruction of underwater archaeological deep-sites
16:20 •
S11-11 Digging into and re-using image data for archaeology
16:45 •
S11-12 A data integration infrastructure for archaeology
Frokostkjelleren
12:10 •
Lunch break
17:30 •
Conference pub at The Frokostkjeller'n
Professorboligen, stallen
10:30 •
S28-01 Why model?
10:45 •
S28-02 What is complexity theory and why should we care about it
11:00 •
S28-03 Simulation as middle-range research
11:15 •
S28-04 Models: ‘small and elegant’ or ‘complicated but realistic’?
11:30 •
S28-05 ABMs, because they’re worth it? Alternatives to our favourite method
11:45 •
S28-06 Fancy doing some networks?
13:30 •
S28-07 Building on expert advice to create an informed model
13:45 •
S28-08 Lessons already learned: drawing from the best software practice
14:00 •
S28-09 Proof of concept verifying
14:15 •
S28-10 Validation: the painful moment when the model meets the data
14:30 •
S28-11 Model selection: what is the ‘best’ model?
15:30 •
S09-01 Is that a good concept?
15:55 •
S09-02 Towards a formalisation of spatio─temporal relationships in chronometric databases
16:20 •
S26-01 Seeing things differently. The use of combined geochemical and geophysical prospection techniques to investigate early Islamic town planning
16:45 •
S26-02 Pipes, pedalis and portable X-ray fluorescence: New avenues for the study of Roman building materials
Vikingskipshuset
18:00 •
The Viking Ship Museum
Thursday
, March 31
Coffee point
10:10 •
Coffee break
15:10 •
Coffee break
Domus Academica, Gamle festsal
08:30 •
S12-13 A new approach for the study and presentation of an archaeological context not traditionally exploitable. Applying a fast but extensive 3D survey to the Bisarcio case study, a Medieval and Post-Medieval cemetery (Sardinia)
08:55 •
S12-14 Digital Archaeological Dissemination: Eleniana Domus in Rome
09:20 •
S12-15 Integrated methodologies for knowledge and valorisation of the Roman Casinum city
09:45 •
S12-16 An exploratory use of 3D for investigating a Prehistoric stratigraphic sequence
10:30 •
S12-17 The building survey of Kaasan Church
10:55 •
S12-18 A virtual reconstruction of the sun temple of Niuserra: From scans to BIM
11:20 •
S12-19 Virtual Cilicia Project: Digital globes for communicating digital archaeological heritage
11:45 •
S12-20 Representing Archaeological Architecture―RAA
Domus Academica, Theologisk eksamenssal
08:30 •
S06-01 Automated heritage monitoring software prototype implementing 3D technologies
08:55 •
S06-02 A machine learning approach for 3D shape analysis and recognition of archaeological objects
09:20 •
S06-03 AsTrend: A las point based methodology for micro surfaces depicting
09:45 •
S06-04 Application of Computer Vision algorithms for automatic classification of archaeological artefacts
10:30 •
S06-05 A comparison of methods for creating 3D models of obsidian artifacts
10:55 •
S06-06 Les gestes retrouves: A 3D visualisation approach to the functional study of Early Upper Palaeolithic grinding stones
11:20 •
S06-07 A methodological approach to the study of prehistoric cave engravings: The case of Cova Eirós (Lugo, Spain)
11:45 •
S06-08 The digital ossuary: Rothwell (Northamptonshire, UK)
13:30 •
S06-09 O brother, where art you? A quantitative approach using 3D models and geometric morphometrics: The case study of the Ayia Irini terracotta figurines
13:55 •
S06-10 From survey to 3D modeling to 3D printing: Bramante's Nymphaeum Colonna at Genazzano
14:20 •
S06-11 3D Reconstruction of Koch, Russian rowing/sailing boat of the 17th Century
Domus Bibliotheca
08:30 •
S20-01 Why, when and how? Context and computer vision in archaeological prospection and interpretation
08:55 •
S20-02 Computer vision applied to historical air photos: The registration and object detection challenge
09:20 •
S20-03 Semi-automatic detection of charcoal kilns from airborne laser scanning data
09:45 •
S20-04 Two methods for semi-automated feature extraction from lidar─derived DEM designed for cairn─fields and burial mounds
10:30 •
S20-05 Using eCognition to improve feature recognition
10:55 •
S20-06 Automated detection of stone-walled ruins using based on support vector machine and histogram of oriented gradients
11:20 •
S20-07 Experiments in the automatic detection of archaeological features in remotely sensed data from Great Plains USA villages
11:45 •
S20-08 Down to the last pixel: Multiband use for direct detection of Caribbean indigenous archaeology
13:30 •
S15-01 Auralization: What can acoustics tell us about digital lived experience?
13:55 •
S15-02 From the largest to the smallest: The use of the latest technology in digitalization of the objects from the collection of the National Maritime Museum in Gdańsk
14:20 •
S15-03 More than just a pretty picture: A review of the use of 3D printing, touch tables and virtual environments to engage the public with Lidar and the archaeology of the New Forest, U.K.
Domus Media, Auditorium 13
08:30 •
Cancelled S17-05 Modelling the road network of central Cappadocia (Turkey): A matter of ‘cost’ and ‘visibility’
08:55 •
S17-06 Testing the validity of network analysis results in research on local transport networks
09:20 •
S17-07 The need of topographic restitution in local mobility analysis
09:45 •
S17-08 From sea to land: Reflections on freight traffic during the Iron Age of the Northeastern Iberian peninsula (6th to 1st centuries BC)
10:30 •
S25-01 Co-designing digital community archaeologies: Experiences from the re-reading the British Memorial Project
10:55 •
S25-02 Using Google Earth applications to enhance public engagement with cultural heritage: An evaluation of Seeing Beneath Stonehenge
11:20 •
S25-03 Rekrei: A public platform for digitally preserving lost heritage
11:45 •
S25-04 Photomodeling and webmappingn on archeological site of Carthage (Tunisia) and data collection in the museum of Bardo (Tunisia)
13:30 •
S25-05 Visualizing original sea level of Stone Age sites on location by means of mobile augmented reality
13:55 •
S25-06 DOMUS: Cyber─archeology and education
14:20 •
S25-07 Democratising the digital: Sustaining community─sourcing platforms for heritage management and conservation by co-creation
Domus Media, Aulaen
08:55 •
S02-02 Using geostatistical modeling to solve spatio─temporal questions
09:20 •
S02-03 Applied Agent-Based Modeling in archaeology: When and why?
10:30 •
S02-05 From the empirical to the conjectural: Settlement patterns on the Mesa Verde landform
10:55 •
S02-06 Studying site construction processes through visibility analyses: The case of Aguas Buenas, Nicaragua, a pre-Hispanic (400-1525 AD) mound complex
11:20 •
S02-07 Assessing visibility and geomorphological biases in archaeological field surveys: a case study on an early Roman colonial landscape in Central-Southern Italy
11:45 •
S02-08 Glacial Archaeology in the Austrian Alps (GAAA)
13:55 •
S02-10 New statistical tests determining the likely reality of a connection between stone circles and astronomical phenomena
14:20 •
S02-11 Least cost path analysis and conditional perception of prehistoric travelers
15:30 •
CAA Annual General Meeting
Frokostkjelleren
12:10 •
Lunch break
17:30 •
Conference pub at The Frokostkjeller'n
Professorboligen, stallen
08:30 •
S05 Unstable futures/potential pasts: Scenarios for digital computing 2020
10:30 •
S08-01 Putting production landscapes into context: A multi-faceted case study from Upper Mesopotamia during the Early Bronze Age
10:55 •
S08-02 Quantifying change: An evolutionary approach to interpret the amphorae production in the Roman Empire
11:20 •
S08-03 Boundaries of agrarian production in the Bergisches Land in 1715 AD
11:45 •
S08-04 Factors of production: Investigating land and labour as limiting factors in agricultural production in the Dutch Roman limes zone via agent-based modelling
13:55 •
S08-06 Co-evolution of culture and trade : Impact of cultural network topology on economic dynamics
14:20 •
S08-07 Defining boundaries: A GIS-based approach to the Sardinian Bronze Age
The Opera House
19:00 •
Conference dinner
Friday
, April 1
Coffee point
10:10 •
Coffee break
15:10 •
Coffee break
Domus Academica, Gamle festsal
08:30 •
S13-01 Digital archaeology and the science of cities: Some observations on the application of spatial interaction models to the study of Minoan urbanism
08:55 •
S13-02 A tale of two city blocks from Ostia, the port-town of Imperial Rome
09:20 •
S13-03 Kerkenes Dag: Materializing an Imaginary City
09:45 •
S13-04 From data visualization to hypothesis generation: An integrated approach for the study of past cityscapes
10:55 •
S13-06 Computational approaches for studying cultural coexistence in Peru’s urban landscape: Contributions and questions
11:20 •
S13-07 On roof construction and wall strength: Non-Linear Structural Integrity Analysis of the Early Bronze Age Helike Corridor House
11:45 •
S13-08 3D GIS in archaeology―A microscale analysis
13:30 •
S13-09 Understanding a Roman insula by the aid of GIS―The Insula 30 in Augusta Raurica (CH)
13:55 •
S13-10 Hand drawn section drawings analyzed in real 3D environment
14:20 •
S13-11 Liquid footprints: Water, urbanism, and sustainability in Roman Ostia
14:45 •
S13-12 The waters of life. Digital approach towards the reconstruction of the small scale water management of Angkor (Cambodia)
Domus Academica, Theologisk eksamenssal
08:30 •
S16-01 A guide to good practice for archaeological network science
08:55 •
S16-02 Exploring formal SNA approaches to funerary contexts in Early Iron Age Italy
09:20 •
S16-03 Wine trade from Roman Crete: Onomastic─geographic network analysis
09:45 •
S16-04 Least-Cost Networks and Network Analysis: Modelling trade relations in early medieval East Central Europe
10:30 •
S16-05 Geometrical and planar graphs in ancient iconography studies, a heuristic tool
10:55 •
S16-06 Discussion
11:20 •
S23-01 Magnetic geophysical prospection on prehistoric iron production sites in cultivated contexts: The case of Ånestad, Hedmark in Norway
11:45 •
S23-02 Understanding contrast at Busayra: Geophysical surveys of an Iron Age settlement in Southwest Jordan
13:30 •
S23-03 Opportunities and limitations of archaeological geophysical prospection on the example Uppåkra in Sweden
13:55 •
S23-04 Looking through the rocks. Geophysical research on the agora of the ancient city: Nea Paphos―A case study
14:20 •
S23-05 A geoarchaeological approach to selected issues in Norwegian archaeological geophysical prospection
14:45 •
S23-06 Picking needles from a magnet: Obstacles and (hidden) opportunities of magnetic prospection in challenging environments
15:30 •
S24-01 New eyes to old graphics. Rock art in the Emirate of Sharjah
15:55 •
S24-02 Documenting facades of Etruscan rock─cut tombs: From 3D recording to archaeological analysis
16:20 •
S24-03 Ex-situ preservation of exposed painted rock art. Applying photogrammetry and color manipulation
16:45 •
S24-04 Photogrammetric rock art detection: Assisting detection of rock art on lichen covered surfaces using photogrammetry and 3D modelling software
Domus Bibliotheca
08:30 •
S14-01 Agent-based modeling and complexity science: The next step in archaeological theory?
08:55 •
S14-02 How agent-based models can be used to investigate the evolution of social complexity in the past: A test of circumscription theory in the Valley of Oaxaca
09:20 •
S14-03 Simulating archaeological landscape formation to understand late Holocene population dynamics and mobility in arid Australia
09:45 •
S14-04 Reinforcement learning for decision making in agent-based models
10:30 •
S14-05 An agent-based approach to weighted decision making in the spatially and temporally variable South African Palaeoscape
10:55 •
S14-06 The versatilist’s story of human dispersal: Climate fluctuation, adaptation and the evolution of human uniqueness
11:20 •
S14-07 Dates and dispersions: Examining the spatio─temporal boundaries of the Guaraní expansion into the La Plata basin with Monte Carlo methods
11:45 •
S14-08 An agent-based modelling approach to a complex problem: Economics and demography of the first farming expansion in the Balkans
13:30 •
S14-09 An agent-based modeling framework for Out of Africa hypotheses
14:20 •
S14-11 An agent based empirical model of collective seasonal hunting
14:45 •
S14-12 The Emergence and Formation Process of the La Tène Culture Settlement System in Upper Silesia (Southern Poland and Northern Czech) in Light of the Simulation Modelling.
15:30 •
S14-13 Can you analyse that? Fitting simulations to idealised outcomes for the origins of farming
15:55 •
S14-14 Everything seems possible: Exploring the parametric space of a simulated prehistoric scenario
16:20 •
S14-15 Evolving hominins in HomininSpace─Genetic Algorithms and the search for the perfect Neanderthal
16:45 •
S14-16 Content or context? Model selection of settlement growth models using entropy maximization
Domus Media, Auditorium 13
08:30 •
S10-01 Theorising the digital turn in archaeology
08:55 •
S10-02 A plea for (non-mathematical) reason. Rethinking the use of computational methods in archaeology
09:45 •
S10 Discussion 1
10:30 •
S10-04 Epistemological considerations on image-based 3D representations: Bridging the paradigms through the objectification of field interpretation
10:55 •
S10-05 How raw is raw data?
11:20 •
S10-06 Communication in archaeological fieldwork: Responses to a digital workflow
11:45 •
S10 Discussion 2
13:30 •
S10-07 The lives of digital machines: Evaluating the significance of historic computing machinery
13:55 •
S10-08 Digital interpretive technologies: A way into difficult heritage in the Middle East and Central Asia?
14:45 •
S10 Discussion 3
15:30 •
S10-10 The apparatus of digital archaeology
15:55 •
S10-11 Deep maps of digital, post-representational archaeology
16:20 •
S10-12 Bringing digital sociology to digital archaeology
16:45 •
S10 Discussion 4
Domus Media, Aulaen
08:30 •
S19-01 Towards a national infrastructure for semi-automatic mapping of cultural heritage in Norway
08:55 •
S19-02 Autonomous stereoscopic photosphere system for archaeological site virtualization
09:20 •
S19-03 Systematic literature review on automated monument detection: A remote investigation on patterns within the field of automated monument detection
09:45 •
S19-04 Spatial analysis of Ancient Egyptian Monuments. Case study: Late Period private funerary monuments of Thebes
10:30 •
S19-05 Optimization in the co-registration of large point clouds for archaeological visualization
10:55 •
S19-06 3D survey for archaeology: When the solution can be a problem
11:20 •
S19-07 Interpolating 3D stratigraphic information from written excavation reports
11:45 •
S19-08 3D photogrammetric documentation in the archaeology of the contemporary past: Preserving the World War II landscape in North-West Sardinia (Italy)
13:55 •
S19-10 A proposal for a collaborative Web Mapping for archaeological spatial data: OpenArcheoMap
14:20 •
S19-11 HumanOS Project: A nomadic osteological inventory
14:45 •
S19-12 Using GIS to study ancient landscapes. The case study of the Pisa centuriation (Italy)
15:30 •
S19-13 Discerning and explaining shape variations in Later Stone Age tanged arrowheads, South Africa
15:55 •
S19-14 Structuring data from documentary study and archives for spatial studies. Examples from funerary archeology
Frokostkjelleren
12:10 •
Lunch break
17:30 •
Conference pub at The Frokostkjeller'n
Professorboligen, stallen
08:30 •
S03-01 Modeling prehistoric maritime interactions in East Polynesia
08:55 •
S03-02 Reconstructing and modelling the Stone Age landscape in Southeastern Norway
09:20 •
S03-03 Uncovering routes to Grenada: Exploring possible routes between mainland South America and the Southern Lesser Antilles
09:45 •
S03-04 Looking for the lost harbor. Role of non-invasive archaeological methods in the reconstruction of the seascape of an ancient city Paphos
10:30 •
S03-05 Simulating Pre-Hispanic canoe navigation in Lake Cocibolca, Nicaragua
10:55 •
S03-06 Evocative virtual exploration of underwater sites: Issues and approaches
11:20 •
S03-07 Discussion
13:30 •
S04-01 No one's business: Negotiating the value of archiving archaeology in Sweden
13:55 •
S04-02 From active database to archive: Case of a Sites and Monuments Register
14:20 •
S04-03 Ensuring cultural heritage data longevity with the Arches Heritage Inventory and Management System
14:45 •
S04-04 Row, row, row your boat gently… upstream: A methodological approach to access Portuguese bioarchaeological data using a computer database
15:30 •
S04-05 Digital archives: More than just a digital skeuomorph?
Saturday
, April 2
Old Oslo
10:00 •
Medieval Oslo
Vestfold County
09:00 •
Viking Age Vestfold
Timezone
CAA2016
Europe/Oslo
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CAA2016
Mar 28
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Apr 2, 2016
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Oslo, Norge
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Domus Academica, Gamle festsal
Domus Academica, Theologisk eksamenssal
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Domus Media, Auditorium 13
Domus Media, Aula foyer
Domus Media, Aulaen
Frokostkjelleren
Historisk museum
Old Oslo
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Professorboligen, stallen
St. Olavs gate 29
The Opera House
Vestfold County
Vikingskipshuset
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Ariadne
CAA Annual General Meeting
Coffe breake
Conference opening
Excursions
implications and solutions
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Lunc
Lunch breake
new perceptions
Posters
S02 Using GIS modeling to solve real-world archaeological problems
S03 Exploring Maritime Spaces with Digital Archaeology: Modelling navigation...
S04 Databases and archives: How do we handle the digital archives?
S05 Unstable futures-potential pasts: Scenarios for digital computing 2020
S06 Computer tools for depicting shape and detail in 3D archaeological models
S07 Integrating 3D photogrammetric data in the field: Challenges
S08 Modelling approaches to analyse the socio-economic context in archaeology II: Defining the limits of production
S09 Archaeological Information Languages and Notations
S10 Theorising the Digital: Digital Theoretical Archaeology Group (digiTAG) and the CAA
S11 Supporting researchers in the use and re-use of archaeological data: Continuing the ARIADNE thread
S12 Documentation interpretation and communication of Digital Archaeological Heritage
S13 Computational approaches to ancient urbanism: Documentation analysis and interpretation
S14 Can you model that? Applications of complex systems simulation to explore the past
S15 Interpretations from digital sensations? Using the digital sensory turn to discover new things about the past
S16 Networking the past: Towards best practice in archaeological network science
S17 The road not taken: Modelling approaches to transport on local and regional scales
S19 New technologies and archeology : The impact of the digital revolution
S20 Computer vision vs human perception in remote sensing image analysis: Time to move on
S21 Linked pasts: Connecting islands of content
S22 Teaching archaeology in the digital age. UISPP official session
S23 Needles in the haystack: Geophysical methods in challenging conditions
S24 Digital rock art documentations
S25 Public archaeology and the use of digital platforms
S26 The portable XRF revolution: Elemental analysis for all?
S27 Revealing by visualising: Geographic relations in cultural heritage databases
S28 Methodology of archaeological simulation. Meeting of the Special Interest Group in Complex Systems Simulation
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Dates
Monday
, March 28
Tuesday
, March 29
Wednesday
, March 30
Thursday
, March 31
Friday
, April 1
Saturday
, April 2
Venue
Coffee point
Domus Academica, Gamle festsal
Domus Academica, Theologisk eksamenssal
Domus Bibliotheca
Domus Media, Auditorium 13
Domus Media, Aula foyer
Domus Media, Aulaen
Frokostkjelleren
Historisk museum
Old Oslo
On your own
Professorboligen, stallen
St. Olavs gate 29
The Opera House
Vestfold County
Vikingskipshuset
Session Type
Ariadne
CAA Annual General Meeting
Coffe breake
Conference opening
Excursions
implications and solutions
Keynote speech
Lunc
Lunch breake
new perceptions
Posters
S02 Using GIS modeling to solve real-world archaeological problems
S03 Exploring Maritime Spaces with Digital Archaeology: Modelling navigation...
S04 Databases and archives: How do we handle the digital archives?
S05 Unstable futures-potential pasts: Scenarios for digital computing 2020
S06 Computer tools for depicting shape and detail in 3D archaeological models
S07 Integrating 3D photogrammetric data in the field: Challenges
S08 Modelling approaches to analyse the socio-economic context in archaeology II: Defining the limits of production
S09 Archaeological Information Languages and Notations
S10 Theorising the Digital: Digital Theoretical Archaeology Group (digiTAG) and the CAA
S11 Supporting researchers in the use and re-use of archaeological data: Continuing the ARIADNE thread
S12 Documentation interpretation and communication of Digital Archaeological Heritage
S13 Computational approaches to ancient urbanism: Documentation analysis and interpretation
S14 Can you model that? Applications of complex systems simulation to explore the past
S15 Interpretations from digital sensations? Using the digital sensory turn to discover new things about the past
S16 Networking the past: Towards best practice in archaeological network science
S17 The road not taken: Modelling approaches to transport on local and regional scales
S19 New technologies and archeology : The impact of the digital revolution
S20 Computer vision vs human perception in remote sensing image analysis: Time to move on
S21 Linked pasts: Connecting islands of content
S22 Teaching archaeology in the digital age. UISPP official session
S23 Needles in the haystack: Geophysical methods in challenging conditions
S24 Digital rock art documentations
S25 Public archaeology and the use of digital platforms
S26 The portable XRF revolution: Elemental analysis for all?
S27 Revealing by visualising: Geographic relations in cultural heritage databases
S28 Methodology of archaeological simulation. Meeting of the Special Interest Group in Complex Systems Simulation
Social event
W1
W2
W3
W4
W5
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