The contribution illustrates the applied procedure of the digital survey and documentation of a funerary epigraph written in Greek but dating back to the Roman period (dimensions of about 31 cm x 20 cm). It comes from Velia (Salerno), a Greek and then Roman city in southern Italy. It was found in 1967 and currently represents the only Greek funerary inscription of the Roman period coming, most probably, from the necropolis of Porta Marina Sud. The inscription presents many gaps and preserves only part of the upper right and lower margins. The surface is highly eroded, maybe due to the exposure to atmospheric agents, making the text interpretation extremely difficult. The implemented image-based and range-based techniques contributed...
The aim of this paper is to show how the possibility to acquire 3D reality-based data from archaeolo...
The paper presents the integration of different 3D recording techniques and instruments to survey th...
none4noThe paper is related to a multi-disciplinary project started in 1999, within a collaboration ...
The contribution illustrates the applied procedure of the digital survey and documentation of a fun...
The inscription on the Roman altar of Gravesano (Ticino, Switzerland) is complete, but its reading i...
This work describes the procedures that have been adopted in the three-dimensional survey of the hie...
3D scanning using laser scanners has been recognized as one of the most efficient and accurate way t...
The following research aims to exploit the low-cost technologies, for the survey and mapping of hist...
The research object is the digital acquisition of a complex architectonic monument, integrating two ...
Accessibility to cultural heritage is one of the most important factors in cultural heritage preserv...
Usually archeological artifacts are documented in written or drawn form: today, thanks to the advent...
Current archaeological research in Greece is greatly enhanced from urban construction development th...
The archaeological excavation is a destructive and not repeatable process: the documentation of arch...
In ancient Rome, damnatio memoriae was a practice of erasing the memory of condemned persons from hi...
The aim of this paper is to show how the possibility to acquire 3D reality-based data from archaeolo...
The paper presents the integration of different 3D recording techniques and instruments to survey th...
none4noThe paper is related to a multi-disciplinary project started in 1999, within a collaboration ...
The contribution illustrates the applied procedure of the digital survey and documentation of a fun...
The inscription on the Roman altar of Gravesano (Ticino, Switzerland) is complete, but its reading i...
This work describes the procedures that have been adopted in the three-dimensional survey of the hie...
3D scanning using laser scanners has been recognized as one of the most efficient and accurate way t...
The following research aims to exploit the low-cost technologies, for the survey and mapping of hist...
The research object is the digital acquisition of a complex architectonic monument, integrating two ...
Accessibility to cultural heritage is one of the most important factors in cultural heritage preserv...
Usually archeological artifacts are documented in written or drawn form: today, thanks to the advent...
Current archaeological research in Greece is greatly enhanced from urban construction development th...
The archaeological excavation is a destructive and not repeatable process: the documentation of arch...
In ancient Rome, damnatio memoriae was a practice of erasing the memory of condemned persons from hi...
The aim of this paper is to show how the possibility to acquire 3D reality-based data from archaeolo...
The paper presents the integration of different 3D recording techniques and instruments to survey th...
none4noThe paper is related to a multi-disciplinary project started in 1999, within a collaboration ...