[EN] This paper presents a novel application of pattern recognition to the provenance classification of archae- ological ceramics. This is a challenging problem for archaeologists, which involves assigning a making location to a fragment of archaeological pottery that was found along with other fragments of pieces made in different distant locations from the find. The pieces look very similar to each other and, often, other contextual information about the use of the pieces cannot be used due to the small size of the fragments. Current standard methods to solve this problem are limited since they are time consuming, require costly equipment, and can lead to the destruction of a part of the pieces. The proposed method overcome those limitati...
This study was aimed at testing a cost‐effective method based on comparing the rare earth element p...
In Cultural Heritage inquiries, a common requirement is to establish time-based trends between archa...
An artificial neural network (ANN) for archaeometric studies was created to facilitate provenance at...
This paper presents a new procedure to classify archaeological ceramics using ultrasound non-destruc...
Este artículo presenta un nuevo procedimiento para la clasificación cronológica (datación relativa) ...
The traditional pottery industry was an important activity in Catalonia (NE Spain) up to the 20th ce...
Background: Portable energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence (pEDXRF) spectrometry analysis was applied...
International audienceArchaeological studies involve more and more numerical data analyses. In this ...
[EN] This paper presents a prospective analysis of non destructive testing (NDT) based on ultrasou...
The provenance study of archaeological materials is an important step in understanding the cultural ...
International audienceA large corpus of ceramic sherds dating from the High Middle Ages has been ext...
Code and data sharing are crucial practices to advance toward sustainable archaeology. This article ...
The chemical compositions of several archaeological, ethnographic and clay samples have been determ...
Abstract We consider a classifier based on Independent Component Analysis Mixture Modelling (ICAMM) ...
This study was aimed at testing a cost‐effective method based on comparing the rare earth element p...
In Cultural Heritage inquiries, a common requirement is to establish time-based trends between archa...
An artificial neural network (ANN) for archaeometric studies was created to facilitate provenance at...
This paper presents a new procedure to classify archaeological ceramics using ultrasound non-destruc...
Este artículo presenta un nuevo procedimiento para la clasificación cronológica (datación relativa) ...
The traditional pottery industry was an important activity in Catalonia (NE Spain) up to the 20th ce...
Background: Portable energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence (pEDXRF) spectrometry analysis was applied...
International audienceArchaeological studies involve more and more numerical data analyses. In this ...
[EN] This paper presents a prospective analysis of non destructive testing (NDT) based on ultrasou...
The provenance study of archaeological materials is an important step in understanding the cultural ...
International audienceA large corpus of ceramic sherds dating from the High Middle Ages has been ext...
Code and data sharing are crucial practices to advance toward sustainable archaeology. This article ...
The chemical compositions of several archaeological, ethnographic and clay samples have been determ...
Abstract We consider a classifier based on Independent Component Analysis Mixture Modelling (ICAMM) ...
This study was aimed at testing a cost‐effective method based on comparing the rare earth element p...
In Cultural Heritage inquiries, a common requirement is to establish time-based trends between archa...
An artificial neural network (ANN) for archaeometric studies was created to facilitate provenance at...