All the accepted papers and posters can be found below. They are organised per session. The abstracts will be available soon in the abstract book.
S01. Integrating mobile computing technologies into traditional archaeological methods
Documentation and Communication: Methods for Mobile LiDAR and Photogrammetry in Practice
Authors: Nikolai Paukkonen (University of Helsinki, Muuritutkimus Oy)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 85
Applying Mobile GIS and the Cultural Stone Stability Index to Monitoring Stone Decay of Excavated Structures at Archaeological Site Stobi, Republic of North Macedonia
Authors: Kristen Jones (Queen’s University Department of Geography & Planning)*; George Bevan (Queen’s University Department of Geography & Planning); Kaelin Groom (Arizona State University); Casey Allen (The University of the West Indies); Dimitar Nikolovski (National Institution Stobi)
Type: Paper, paper number: 166
Critical evaluation of SLAM-based mobile LiDAR mapping methods for documentation of archaeological cave sites and subsequent integration with multimodal and multi-scalar datasets
Authors: Dominique Rissolo (University of California, San Diego)*; Holley Moyes (University of California, Merced); Eric Lo (University of California, San Diego); Hilda Lozano Bravo (University of California, Merced); Scott McAvoy (University of California, San Diego); Shane Montgomery (University of Calgary); Samuel Meacham (Centro Investigador del Sistema Acuifero de Quintana Roo); Helena Barba-Meinecke (Instituto Nacional de Antropologia e Historia); Falko Kuester (UC San Diego)
Type: Paper, paper number: 183
Field trial of using a custom mobile application for data collection of wall structures
Authors: Ying Tung Fung (Hebrew University of Jerusalum)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 310
Utilizing mobile applications for LiDAR data field surveys and archaeological interpretations
Authors: Miroslav Vuković (University of Zagreb)*; Hrvoje Potrebica (University of Zagreb); Luka Drahotusky-Bruketa (University of Zagreb)
Type: Paper, paper number: 316
Scan to BIM using the iPad Pro: modelling a Neolithic passage tomb at Dowth Hall, Co. Meath, Ireland
Authors: Eimear Meegan (Virtual Lab Dublin)*; Jessica Mendoza (Carleton Immersive Media Studio); Maurice Murphy (Virtual Lab Dublin); Clíodna Ní Lionáin (Devenish Nutrition)
Type: Paper, paper number: 337
Archaeological 3D models: mobile devices vs classical devices and techniques in archaeological documentation and presentation
Authors: Nenad C Joncic (National Museum of Serbia)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 364
FAIR data in the field
Authors: Adela Sobotkova (Aarhus University)*; Shawn Ross (Macquarie University); Brian Ballsun-Stanton (Macquarie University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 379
S02. Studying uncertainties in archaeology: A new research agenda
Ambiguous Landscapes: Quantifying uncertainty in non-systematic regional survey data
Authors: Eduardo Herrera Malatesta (Aarhus University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 46
Challenges and Limits of an Archaeological Dataset – Case Study of the Middle Danube Germanic Society during the Roman Period
Authors: Marek Vlach (Institute of Archaeology of the Czech Academy of Sciences Brno)*; Balázs Komoróczy (Institute of Archaeology of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Brno)
Type: Paper, paper number: 83
Modelling past land use and settlement patterns in a fragmented landscape. A case study from the SW Baltic region
Authors: Giacomo Bilotti (University of Kiel, CRC 1266)*; Michael Kempf (University of Kiel, CRC 1266); Julian Laabs (University of Kiel, CRC 1266)
Type: Paper, paper number: 132
If you can’t beat vagueness, use it: exploiting uncertainty to gain confidence in a biased archaeological record
Authors: Manuela Ritondale (University of Groningen)*; Daniella Vos (University of Groningen)
Type: Paper, paper number: 175
Degrees of certainty in historical and archaeological 3D reconstructions: classifying certainty in the context of the Virtual Interiors Project and 4D Research Lab projects
Authors: Tijm Lanjouw (UvA)*; Chiara Piccoli (UvA)
Type: Paper, paper number: 237
Mapping human-environment interactions in the Marmarica region (NE-Libya/NW-Egypt): an approach to the uncertainty principle in geospatial analysis
Authors: David L Laguna-Palma (Department of Prehistory and Archaeology)*; Fernando Moreno-Navarro (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid)
Type: Paper, paper number: 255
Archaeoriddle: A collaborative game to improve archaeological inference
Authors: Alfredo Cortell-Nicolau (University of Cambridge)*; Simon Carrignon (McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge); Leah Brainerd (University of Cambridge); Charles Simmons (University of Cambridge); Joseph Lewis (University of Cambridge); Enrico R Crema (University of Cambridge)
Type: Paper, paper number: 295
Morphology of shelters with paintings and rock engravings in the Carnaúba River valley (RN): relationship between the shape of spaces and the choices for graphic practice in prehistory
Authors: José Nicodemos Chagas Junior (UFPE)*; Demétrio Mutzenberg (UFPE); BRUNO AC TAVARES (UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DE PERNAMBUCO)
Type: Poster, paper number: 296
Simulating the formation of herbivore teeth death assemblages to improve expectations for paleoenvironmental reconstruction from intra-tooth isotopic analysis
Authors: Ben Davies (Yale University)*; Alexandra Norwood (University of Michigan); Judith Sealy (University of Cape Town); Julie Luyt (University of Cape Town); David Braun (George Washington University); Tyler Faith (University of Utah)
Type: Paper, paper number: 320
S03. Our Little Minions pt. V: small tools with major impact
Tachy2GIS and Tachy2GIS_arch – two plugins for direct total station measuring in QGIS.
Authors: Christof Schubert (Landesamt für Archäologie Sachsen)*; Jörg Räther (Archäologisches Museum Hamburg)
Type: Paper, paper number: 48
CORPUS NUMMORUM – A Digital Research Infrastructure for Ancient Coins
Authors: Ulrike Peter (Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities)*; Karsten Tolle (Goethe-University); Jan Köster (Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities); Claus Franke (Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities); Sebastian Gampe (Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main ); Bernhard Weisser (Münzkabinett. Staatliche Museen zu Berlin)
Type: Poster, paper number: 159
MiGIS – Document, analyse and share your micromorphological observations of archaeological sediment thin sections
Authors: Mirijam Zickel (University of Colgne)*; Astrid Röpke (University of Cologne); Martin Kehl (University of Cologne)
Type: Paper, paper number: 299
The bonestatr: An R package to facilitate choosing the best human stature reconstruction method based on bones
Authors: Robert Mahler (Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology, University of Warsaw)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 304
S04. “Hey Google, stop that looter”: digital technologies against cultural heritage crimes; critical approaches, ongoing solutions and beyond
Photogrammetry and 3D point cloud processing software as a tool against looting: an efficient combination to create a catalog of stolen objects
Authors: Florence Gilliard (CH)*
Type: Poster, paper number: 95
Once upon a time, there was an archaeological site. Then the looters came… A true story featuring archaeology of the war, archaeology through the war, and illegal excavations
Authors: Luigi Magnini (University of Sassari (Italy))*; Anna Michielin (University of Bologna); Cinzia Bettineschi (University of Augsburg); Giovanni Azzalin (University of Sassari); Marco Milanese (University of Sassari); Armando De Guio (University of Padova)
Type: Paper, paper number: 269
Monitoring from space: satellite imagery for the identification of looting patterning and looters behaviour.
Authors: Maria Cristina Salvi (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia)*; Riccardo Giovanelli (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia); Michela De Bernardin (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia); Arianna Traviglia (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT))
Type: Paper, paper number: 315
A Solid Foundation? Creating Robust and Reliable Spatiotemporal Looting Data from Satellite Imagery in Egypt
Authors: Michelle D. Fabiani (University of New Haven)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 371
S05. For new epistemologies in Archaeology: using probability, networks and mathematical models to build archaeological knowledge
An Archaeology of probabilities
Authors: Daniel Carvalho (UNIARQ; FCT; LAQU); Joel Santos (University of Leicester)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 77
Dig it: recent thoughts on archaeological epistemology
Authors: geoff carver (rgzm)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 82
Similarity Network Fusion: Understanding Patterns and their Spatial Significance in Archaeological Datasets
Authors: Timo Geitlinger (University of Oxford)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 86
There is no epistemology without creativity, or how to combine quantitative methods, material culture, and theoretical approaches
Authors: Tânia M Casimiro (FCSH-UNL)*; Joel Santos (University of Leicester); Inês Castro (FCSH-UNL)
Type: Paper, paper number: 104
WEaning Age FiNder (WEAN): A tool for estimating weaning age from sequential isotopic analysis of dentinal collagen
Authors: Elissavet Ganiatsou (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace)*; Angelos Souleles (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace); Christina Papageorgopoulou (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace)
Type: Paper, paper number: 190
Modelling and measuring complexity of traditional and ancient technologies using Petri nets
Authors: Sebastian Fajardo (Mechanical, Maritime and Materials Engineering, Delft University of Technology)*; Jetty Kleijn (Leiden Institute of Advanced Computer Science (LIACS), Leiden University); Geeske Langejans (Mechanical, Maritime and Materials Engineering, Delft University of Technology); Frank Takes (Leiden University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 216
Visual Quantity – Comparative Analysis of Decoration Occurrence and Distribution in Ancient Egyptian Funerary Monuments
Authors: Anja Wutte (TU Wien)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 305
Minoan Assemblage Distributions and Machine Learning
Authors: Ray Rivers (Imperial College London ); Henry C. W. Price (Imperial College London ); Paula Gheorghiade (University of Helsinki); Vaiva Vasiliauskaite (ETH Zurich); Aleksandr Diachenko (Inst. of Archaeology, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine ); Tim Evans (Imperial College London )*; Fabrice Rossi (Université Paris Dauphine)
Type: Paper, paper number: 329
S06. Stay connected: Developing Mobile GIS for team-based collaboration in archaeological research
Implementation of Mobile GIS for Stone Age field survey in southern Botswana
Authors: Chris Green (Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel)*; Sarah Mothulatshipi (University of Botswana); Michaela Ecker (Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel)
Type: Paper, paper number: 100
Typology of MobileGIS workflow in archaeological prospection: Crowd Data Collection, Volunteer Geographic Information or Geographic Citizen Science?
Authors: Julia M. Chyla (Faculty of Archaeology, University of Warsaw)*; Miłosz Giersz (Faculty of Archaeology, University of Warsaw)
Type: Paper, paper number: 148
(Reading) African Palimpsest – the use of mobileGIS for a team based collaboration: the case study of the rural hinterland of Mustis (Tunisia)
Authors: Julia M. Chyla (Faculty of Archaeology, University of Warsaw); Tomasz Waliszewski (Uniwersytet Warszawski)*; Jamel Hajji (The National Heritage Institute, Tunisia); Faouzi Ghozzi (The National Heritage Institute, Tunisia); Ewa Smolska (Faculty of Geography and Regional Studies, University of Warsaw); Jerzy Lechnio (Faculty of Geography and Regional Studies, University of Warsaw); Piotr Szwarczewski (Faculty of Geography and Regional Studies, University of Warsaw); Ouadii El Aroui (CGMED Laboratory, FSHS Tunis, University of Tunis); Piotr Makowski (Institute of Archaeology, Jagiellonian University); Krzysztof Misiewicz (Uniwersytet Warszawski); Radosław Mieszkowski (Faculty of Geology, University of Warsaw); Adrian Ochtyra (Faculty of Geography and Regional Studies, University of Warsaw); Chokri Touihri (Institut National du Patrimoine); Paweł Rongies (Faculty of Archaeology, University of Warsaw); Konstanty Kowalewski (Faculty of Archaeology, University of Warsaw)
Type: Paper, paper number: 149
Mobile GIS and Digital Data Collection Workflows on the Kasakh Valley Archaeological Survey (KVAS), Northwestern Armenia
Authors: Ian Lindsay (Purdue University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 168
MOBILE GIS: A POSSIBILITY FOR COMMERCIAL ARCHAEOLOGY. THE EXPERIENCE OF USING QFIELD ON FIELDWORK.
Authors: Benedetta Baleani (SUNY-University at Buffalo)*; Giuseppe Prospero Cirigliano (Università degli studi di Siena); Edoardo Vanni (University for foreigners of Siena)
Type: Paper, paper number: 180
The use of QField in the Ager Rusellanus (Grosseto, Italy), between traditional and experimental methods.
Authors: GIUSEPPE CIRIGLIANO (Università degli studi di Siena)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 182
Use and contribution to the field methodology of Mobile Gis in forest contexts. The case study of boreal forests (Skåne, Sweden)
Authors: GIUSEPPE CIRIGLIANO (Università degli studi di Siena)*
Type: Poster, paper number: 206
At the interface between GIS mobile applications and reflexive archaeology: using QField app in archaeological surveys
Authors: Giordano De Coste (Roma Tre University); Emeri Farinetti (Roma Tre University)*; Matteo Rossi (Roma Tre University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 213
An Android-based freeware solution for field survey and onsite artifact analysis
Authors: João Cascalheira (ICArEHB – University of Algarve)*; Joana Belmiro (ICArEHB – Universidade do Algarve); Ana Abrunhosa (CENIEH); Célia Gonçalves (ICArEHB – Universidade do Algarve)
Type: Paper, paper number: 214
Underground Warfare: field survey with mobile GIS app to reconstruct the WWI warscape
Authors: Stefano Pedersoli (University of Sassari)*; Giovanni Azzalin (University of Sassari); Anna Michielin (University of Bologna); Marika Cogo (University of Padua); Luigi Magnini (University of Sassari (Italy))
Type: Paper, paper number: 270
In the land of basalt rocks stone and terraces. Use of mobile GIS in documenting the prehistoric megalithic culture of Akkar in northern Lebanon.
Authors: Filip Waldoch (IMOC PAS)*; Zuzanna Wygnańska (IMOC PAS)
Type: Paper, paper number: 341
Transitioning to new FAIMS3.0: to GUI or not to GUI?
Authors: Adela Sobotkova (Aarhus University)*; Shawn Ross (Macquarie University); Brian Ballsun-Stanton (Macquarie University); Penny Crook (Macquarie University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 380
S07. Open Analytical Workflows and Quantitative Data Integration in Archaeological Prospection
Survey Planning, Allocation, Costing and Evaluation (SPACE) Project: Developing a Tool to Help Archaeologists Conduct More Effective Surveys
Authors: Edward B Banning (University of Toronto)*; Steven Edwards (Nova Scotia Community College); Isaac IT Ullah (San Diego State University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 18
Documenting drone remote sensing: a virtual reconstruction approach
Authors: Jitte Waagen (Universiteit van Amsterdam)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 109
Modeling landscape evolution and archaeological site distributions in eastern South Africa: a geo-archaeoinformatic approach
Authors: Anastasia Eleftheriadou (Interdisciplinary Center for Archaeology and the Evolution of Human Behavior (ICArEHB))*
Type: Poster, paper number: 157
Machine Learning approaches for a multi-scale and multi-source detection and characterization of archaeological sites: the case of the funerary tumuli at Abdera (Thrace, Greece, 6th – 2nd C. BCE, aprox.)
Authors: Arnau Garcia-Molsosa (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology)*; Hector A. Orengo (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology); Mercouris Georgiadis (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology); Nikolas Dimakis (National & Kapodistrian University of Athens); Paraskevi Motsiou (National & Kapodistrian University of Athens); Alfredo Mayoral (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology); Eurydice Kefalidou ( National & Kapodistrian University of Athens); Konstantina Kallintzi (Eforate for Antiquities of Xanthi, Greek Ministry of Culture)
Type: Paper, paper number: 264
The use of Photogrammetry and Computer Vision with Python programming language for plotting lithic surface scatters
Authors: Jovan Galfi (ICArEHB)*; Anastasia Eleftheriadou (Interdisciplinary Center for Archaeology and the Evolution of Human Behavior (ICArEHB))
Type: Poster, paper number: 278
Conducting soil surveys – orchestrating change: developing practices to enable an integrated approach to agricultural and archaeological management
Authors: Eamonn Baldwin (University of Glasgow)*; Rachel Opitz (University of Glasgow); Philippe De Smedt (BE); Stefano Campana (University of Siena); Victorino Mayoral (Merida Institute of Archaeology); Marco Vieri (University of Florence); Carolina Perna (University of Florence); Daniele Sarri (University of Florence)
Type: Paper, paper number: 331
Patterns of Pilwe: A Multi Criteria Decision Making and Analysis Approach to Prospecting for Late Iron Age Settlements in Savannah Woodland Environments
Authors: Erica EC Wynter (University of South Africa)*; Maarten Jordaan (University of South Africa)
Type: Paper, paper number: 339
Field survey and environmental proxy data to asses the Roman Rural world in Lusitania.
Authors: Jesus Garcia Sanchez (Instituto de Arqueología, Mérida (IAM) CSIC)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 343
Taming Complexity: the rocky road from qualitatively accurate to quantitatively precise data analysis and interpretation in archaeo-geophysical survey
Authors: Agnes Schneider (Leiden University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 353
Site prospection and workflow for weighted overlay analysis: A suitability model for the excavation of a settlement at the Amazon estuary.
Authors: Bruno S Barreto (University of Bonn / University of São Paulo)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 375
S08. Where do you draw your lines? Mapping transformation of archaeological practice in the digital a
Digital Transformations in Maritime Archaeological Practice
Authors: Felix Pedrotti (University of Southampton)*; Crystal Safadi (University of Southampton); Fraser Sturt (University of Southampton)
Type: Paper, paper number: 56
Mapping the impacts of photogrammetry on workflow and dataflow in archaeological excavation
Authors: Eric E Poehler (University of Massachusetts Amherst)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 84
With great power comes great responsibility: rethinking the role of new technologies in the archaeological recording workflow
Authors: Bet Mallofré López (LAM-UB); Sabina Batlle Baró (Universitat de Barcelona)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 110
An underground map of archaeological practice going digital
Authors: Markos Katsianis (University of Patras)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 131
Cultural significance assessment of archaeological sites for Heritage Management in the Digital Age: from text to spatial networks of meanings
Authors: Yael Alef (Israel Antiquities Authority)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 142
Body Mapping the Digital: visually representing the impact of technology on archaeological practice
Authors: Leila Araar (The University of York)*; Colleen Morgan (GB); Louise Fowler (MOLA)
Type: Paper, paper number: 151
Landscape Heterogeneity at the Acheulean Site of Rodafnidia (Lesbos, NE Aegean): Connecting sites and continental models through intermediary scales
Authors: Patrick Cuthbertson (PADMAC Unit, Oxford)*; Peny Tsakanikou (Department of History and Archaeology, University of Crete); Simon Kübler (Ludwig Maximilians University Dept of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Munich); Nena Galanidou (Department of History and Archaeology, University of Crete)
Type: Paper, paper number: 170
Aligning procedures to map archaeological practice: the Tradition in Transition methodology
Authors: Loes Opgenhaffen (Saxion University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 173
Not one but many lines: mapping an intellectual genealogy of one practitioner’s digital archaeological practice as a spatiotemporal network
Authors: Adam Rabinowitz (The University of Texas at Austin)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 208
Using In-Person and Remote Methods of Co-Design to Build Research-Oriented VR Programs.
Authors: Cole Juckette (University of Glasgow )*
Type: Paper, paper number: 225
Mapping transformation of archaeological practice through digital data curation by using the Archaeological Interactive Report (AIR)
Authors: Paola Derudas (Lund University)*; Federico Nurra (Institut national d’histoire de l’art (INHA))
Type: Paper, paper number: 234
The gap in the line – digital impact on fieldwork practices
Authors: Åsa Berggren (Lund University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 246
1-DRAW AND 3-DIMENSIONS: A METHODOLOGICAL PROPOSAL FOR THE RECOVERY OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL FINDS
Authors: Veronica Venco (University of Sassari)*; Elena Griggio (University of Padova)
Type: Paper, paper number: 247
Show me the data! A call for including more data as part of reporting excavations
Authors: Daniel Lowenborg (Uppsala University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 256
Complexity science as a way of thinking
Authors: Iza Romanowska (Aarhus Institute of Advanced Studies)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 263
The transformation of an archaeological community and its resulting representations in the context of the co-developpement of open Archaeological Information Systems
Authors: Eric Lacombe (MICA – Bordeaux-Montaigne University)*; Dominik A Lukas (University of Chicago)
Type: Paper, paper number: 307
Current approaches to computational archaeology at GIAP-ICAC
Authors: Hector A. Orengo (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 333
Re-thinking Our Digital Archaeological Practice through 3D Data-driven Analysis and Interpretative Visualization: Lessons Learned at Çatalhöyük and Palenque
Authors: Nicola Lercari (Institute for Digital Cultural Heritage Studies – LMU Munich)*; Arianna Campiani (Dipartimento di Scienze dell’Antichità – Sapienza University of Rome)
Type: Paper, paper number: 361
S09. Digital approaches to Roman port urbanism: from data acquisition to computational analysis and visual reconstruction
A custom generative pipeline for Ancient Roman Portscapes urban and architectural 3D restitutions
Authors: Renato Saleri (UMR MC/CNRS 3495 MAP)*; Stéphanie Mailleur (MAP-Aria (CNRS/MC))
Type: Paper, paper number: 98
Connecting ports and territories: examples from Asia Minor
Authors: Maria del Carmen Moreno Escobar (Lund University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 120
S10. Computer applications in archaeology – Bringing South Asia together
‘Mapping’ modalities in archaeological remains – Building GIS of Mohenjo-Daro’s DK(G)-S mound
Authors: Pallavee Gokhale (IISER Pune)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 43
Mapping paleo-landscape of Harappan port Lothal using cloud-computing and multi platforms
Authors: Ekta Gupta (IIT-Gandhinagar)*; V N Prabhakar (IIT-Gandhinagar)
Type: Paper, paper number: 51
Spatially sizing up cleavers: GIS-based perspectives on the Indian Acheulean evidence
Authors: Parth Chauhan (Dept of HSS IISER Sec 81 Mohali 140306 Punjab); Pallavee Gokhale (IISER Pune)*; Prabhin Sukumaran (Dr. K.C. Patel Research and Development Centre, Charotar University of Science and Technology (CHARUSAT), Changa, Anand, Gujarat); vaneshree vidyarthi (Cambridge Archaeological Unit)
Type: Paper, paper number: 75
The Interactive Corpus of Indus Texts (ICIT) as an epigraphical database and online tool for Indus script research
Authors: Andreas Fuls (Technische Universität Berlin)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 76
Exploring pathways between rock art sites in central India using a network approach: Implications for cultural dispersals and social interactions
Authors: Ketika Garg (Caltech )*; Parth R. Chauhan (IISER Mohali)
Type: Paper, paper number: 164
How to survive in a resource rich but unsteady environment? Modelling early hominin subsistence behavior in the Pleistocene Indo-Gangetic floodplains.
Authors: Jan-Olaf Reschke (ROCEEH Senckenberg, Senckenberg Research Institute; Goethe University, Dept. Of Biosciences, Paleobiology and Environment)*; Christine Hertler (ROCEEH Senckenberg, Senckenberg Research Institute); Susanne Krueger (ROCEEH Senckenberg, Senckenberg Research Institute)
Type: Paper, paper number: 165
Mapping the Indian Palaeolithic
Authors: vaneshree vidyarthi (Cambridge Archaeological Unit)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 179
Preservation of Rock Art Images by Enhancement Techniques
Authors: Seema Kumari (IIT Gandhinagar); Sharada Channarayapatna (Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar)*; Shanmuganathan Raman (Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Gandhinagar)
Type: Poster, paper number: 186
Loss of heritage in riverine monsoonal plains: integration of geospatial legacy data and multi-source remote sensing in Jammu, India
Authors: Navjot Kour (Institut Català d’Arqueologia Clàssica)*; Francesc Conesa (Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology); Arnau Garcia-Molsosa (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology); Hector A. Orengo (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology)
Type: Paper, paper number: 220
Mapping Indus archaeology and multi-temporal land cover trends in semi-arid regions
Authors: Francesc Conesa (Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology)*; Hector A. Orengo (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology); Arnau Garcia-Molsosa (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology); Abhayan GS (University of Kerala); Rajesh SV (University of Kerala)
Type: Paper, paper number: 286
Experimentation of Digital modelling in the Quantification of Lithic Artefacts
Authors: Ravindra Devra (Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Mohali, India)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 369
Multilayer Methodologies from Remote Sensing to stone tools: Application of Computation archaeology for Exploration of Barwaniya W1, Jharkhand
Authors: Shubham Rajak (Deccan College Postgraduate and Research Institute (Deemed University), Pune)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 381
S11. The Age of #Archaeogaming: The Past and Future of Archaeology + Video Games
The unwritten presence of emotions in archaeological research and their future in archaeo-gaming.
Authors: Luca Ottonello (University of Glasgow)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 8
Creating Archaeogames – Experiences and results of a joint course in digital archaeology and digital humanities
Authors: Valentina Hiseni (University of Cologne); Sebastian Hageneuer (University of Cologne)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 19
Student Feedback on Archaeogaming: Perspectives from a Classics’ Classroom
Authors: Robert P Stephan (University of Arizona)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 22
The Chaînes that Bind Us: Why the Chaîne Opératoire is Not Enough for Digital Artefacts
Authors: Katie M Biittner (MacEwan University)*; John Aycock (University of Calgary)
Type: Paper, paper number: 59
Assessing digital methods of communicating archaeological research to the public: storytelling, interaction and immersion
Authors: Despoina V Sampatakou (University of York)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 60
Archaeology as Worldbuilding
Authors: Colleen Morgan (GB)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 91
Transforming the Archaeological Record Into a Digital Playground: a Critical Analysis of The Living Hill Project
Authors: Samanta Mariotti (University of Bari)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 147
Gamifying Ancient Transcaucasia: Prototyping the Creation of Digital Cultural Heritage
Authors: Robert C Bryant (UPenn)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 184
Archives (Not) Of Our Own: Procedurally Generating Object Biographies
Authors: Florence Smith Nicholls (Queen Mary University of London)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 201
Performing Glencoe – Creative Digital Archaeology and the Living Landscape
Authors: Elizabeth Robertson (University of Glasgow)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 211
Playing for high stakes. Archaeogaming and the deconstruction of populist conservative appropriations of the past
Authors: Mara Visonà (University of Salento – Lecce)*; Vincenzo Idone Cassone (Ritsumeikan University – Kyoto)
Type: Paper, paper number: 215
Designing Stories from the Grave: Reviving the History of a city through Human Remains and Serious Games
Authors: Electra Tsaknaki (Centre for Research & Technology Hellas (CERTH))*; Eleftherios Anastasovitis (Centre for Research & Technology Hellas (CERTH)); Georgia Georgiou ( Centre for Research & Technology Hellas (CERTH)); Kleopatra Alagialoglou (Tetragon S.A.); Maria Mavrokostidou (Tetragon S.A.); Asterios Aidonis ( Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace); Vasiliki Kartsiakli (dot2dot Social Cooperative Enterprise); Tania Protopsalti ( Ephorate of Antiquities of Thessaloniki City); Spiros Nikolopoulos (ITI-CERTH); Yiannis Kompatsiaris (CERTH-ITI)
Type: Paper, paper number: 228
The digital Age of Sail: gamification of maritime heritage. The case study of the Witsen Scheepsbouw platform
Authors: Ab Hoving (Ab Hoving); Johan Opdebeeck (Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed ); Rob van Haarlem (Tijdlab); Tomas Schuurbiers (Tijdlab); Merel L. van den Hoek (Tijdlab)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 259
Cultural Gaming in the Metaverse: what potentialities for future applications?
Authors: Margo Lengua (Entertainment Game Apps, Ltd.); Michela De Bernardin (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 294
ARCHAEOLOGY AND TECHNOLOGY: THE DEVELOPMENT OF AN ARCHAEOGAME
Authors: Amanda Pina (University of São Paulo)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 317
10 years of Archaeogaming; Good Hits & Bad Misses
Authors: Aris Politopoulos (Leiden University)*; Angus Mol (Leiden University); Csilla E Ariese (Reinwardt Academy)
Type: Paper, paper number: 340
Gaming as a Guide to the Past Environments: A Gentle Assistance to Landscape Archaeology in Palaepaphos, Cyprus.
Authors: EFSTRATIOS MAVROS (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 350
S12. Chronological modelling: formal methods and research software
Automating chronology construction and archiving (FAIR)ly along the way
Authors: Caitlin E Buck (University of Sheffield)*; Bryony Moody (University of Sheffield); Keith May (Historic England); Thomas Dye (University of Hawaii)
Type: Paper, paper number: 57
Conventions for Archaeological Stratigraphic and Chronological Data
Authors: Keith May (Historic England)*; James Taylor (Department of Archaeology, University of York)
Type: Paper, paper number: 70
Aoristic temporal study of heterogeneous amphora data in Roman Germania reveals centuries-long change in regional patterns of production and consumption
Authors: Tom Brughmans (Classical Archaeology and Centre for Urban Network Evolutions (UrbNet), Aarhus University)*; Tyler Franconi (Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology & the Ancient World, Brown University); Ekaterina Borisova (Center for Humanities Computing Aarhus, Aarhus University); Laura Paulsen (Center for Humanities Computing Aarhus, Aarhus University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 105
Beyond chronological networks: a comparison of formal models for archaeological chronology
Authors: Eythan Levy (Bern University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 123
Temporal Modelling of the Roman Marble Trade
Authors: Devi Taelman (Vrije Universiteit Brussel)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 124
Right on time: Chronological and stratigraphic modelling of the occupational surfaces at the lacustrine site of La Draga (Lake Banyoles, Spain). Bayesian analysis of C14 dates, tree-ring data and stratigraphical information.
Authors: Vasiliki Andreaki (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona )*; Joan Anton Barcelo (UAB, Spain)
Type: Paper, paper number: 163
An Alternative Method for Sequence Matching in Dendrochronology using Dynamic Time Warping
Authors: Monty Ochocki (University of Oxford)*; Christopher Bronk Ramsey (University of Oxford)
Type: Poster, paper number: 174
Dendrochronological networks: from time series to networks and back to spatio-temporal patterns again
Authors: Ronald Visser (Saxion University of Applied Sciences)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 189
Discussing the need for a new CAA Special Interest Group on chronological modelling
Authors: Thomas Huet (University of Oxford, School of Archaeology)*; Eythan Levy (Bern University); Florian Thiery (LEIZA); Allard Mees (LEIZA)
Type: Paper, paper number: 283
ChronOntology for periodisations in Entangled Africa
Authors: Wolfgang Schmidle (DAI)*; Eymard Fäder (Universität zu Köln); Johanna Sigl (KAAK); Eva Reinke (Universität zu Köln); Lukas Lammers (Universität zu Köln); Florian Lukas (KAAK)
Type: Paper, paper number: 285
EXTENDING THE EXTENDED MATRIX (EM) with CIDOC-CRM: A FORMAL METHOD and RESEARCH SOFTWARE for VIRTUAL RECONSTRUCTION PROCESSES and beyound
Authors: Elisabetta C Giovannini (DAD Politecnico di Torino)*; Emanuel Demetrescu (ISPC-CNR)
Type: Paper, paper number: 311
Tidying up time: towards an infrastructure for chronological modelling in R
Authors: Joe Roe (University of Bern)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 362
S13. An inventory of the Sea: our shared marine heritage challenges and opportunities
Dealing with data about, but not from, Doggerland
Authors: Philip Murgatroyd (University of Bradford)*; Vincent Gaffney (University of Bradford); Simon Fitch (University of Bradford)
Type: Paper, paper number: 6
Aggregating the UK’s maritime data in Unpath’d Waters
Authors: Julian Richards (GB)*; Jamie Bradley (Archaeology Data Service); Jamie G Geddes (Archaeology Data Service); Holly Wright (University of York)
Type: Paper, paper number: 12
Establishing the guiding principles for maritime heritage data and databases in the eastern Mediterranean: initial review of feasibility and potential
Authors: Crystal Safadi (University of Southampton)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 32
Recording Davy Jones’ Locker: Reimagining the National Marine Heritage Record for England
Authors: Phil Carlisle (Historic England); Hefin Meara (Historic England)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 34
Photogrammetry as an accurate tool to document our hidden submerged heritage: methodological approach and examples from swiss lakes
Authors: Florence Gilliard (CH)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 94
Embedding heritage data within a broader marine context
Authors: Clare F Postlethwaite (Marine Enviornmental Data and Information Network (MEDIN))*
Type: Paper, paper number: 210
Unpath’d Waters: Values and co-design in large scale maritime immersives
Authors: Stuart Jeffrey (GB)*; Sara Perry (Museum of London Archaeology); Katrina Foxton (Museum of London Archaeology); Lawrence Northall (National Maritime Museum)
Type: Paper, paper number: 229
Modest Doubt: Enabling Discovery Across Maritime Heritage Records
Authors: Jack W F Pink (University of Southampton)*; Shrikriti Singh (University of Southampton); Adriane Chapman (University of Southampton); Fraser Sturt (University of Southampton)
Type: Paper, paper number: 248
Shifting Sands: a review of the marine archaeological record in Scotland.
Authors: Peter McKeague (Historic Environment Scotland)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 273
The CHERISH Project: Integrated survey of the marine historic environment
Authors: Anthony Corns (The Discovery Programme)*; Robert Shaw (The Discovery Programme); Edward Pollard (The Discovery Programme); Sandra Henry (The Discovery Programme); Louise Barker (RCAHMW); Toby Driver (RCAHMW); Hannah Genders Boyd (RCAHMW); Kieran Craven (Techworks/GSI); Sean Cullen (GSI)
Type: Paper, paper number: 345
S14. Robotics and Archaeology – on the state of the art and beyond
Exploiting RFID Technology and Robotics in the Museum
Authors: Antonis Dimitriou (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki); Stella Papadopoulou ( Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki); Maria Dermenoudi (Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki); Vasiliki Drakaki (Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki); Andreana Malama (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki); Alexandros Filotheou (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki); Aristidis Raptopoulos Chatzistefanou (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki); Anastasios Tzitzis (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki); Spyros Megalou (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki); Stavroula Siachalou (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki); Aggelos Bletsas (School of ECE & TSI, Technical Univ. of Crete); Traianos Yioultsis (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki); Anna Maria Velentza (University of Macedonia); Sofia Pliasa (University of Macedonia); Nikolaos Fachantidis (University of Macedonia); Angela Moneda (Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki)*; Evangelia Tsangaraki (Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki); Dimitrios Karolidis (Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki); Charalampos Tsoungaris (Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki); Panagiota Balafa (Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki); Angeliki Koukouvou (Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki)
Type: Paper, paper number: 89
Why decimating drone-derived LiDAR point clouds for archaeological purposes?
Authors: Joao Fonte (Universidade da Maia)*; Luis Gonçalves Seco (Universidade da Maia); Marta Vázquez (Universidade da Maia); Tiago do Pereiro (ERA Arqueologia S.A.); Rita Dias (ERA Arqueologia S.A.); João Hipólito (ERA Arqueologia S.A.); José Pedro (ERA Arqueologia S.A.); António Neves (Universidade de Aveiro); Daniel D Canedo (University of Aveiro); Petia Georgieva (University of Aveiro)
Type: Paper, paper number: 97
Marine robotic technologies and vision-based approaches within the underwater archaeological research
Authors: Eleni Diamanti (NTNU)*; Mauhing Yip (NTNU); Oyvind Odegard (NO); Annette Stahl (Norwegian University of Science and Technology)
Type: Paper, paper number: 106
The contribution of robotic archaeology and automated controlled experimentation in use-wear analysis.
Authors: Joao MF Marreiros (TraCEr. MONREPOS-RGZM. ICArEHB, UAlg)*; Ivan Calandra ( TraCEr. MONREPOS-RGZM); Geoff Carver (TraCEr. MONREPOS-RGZM); Walter Gneisinger (TraCEr. MONREPOS-RGZM); David Nora (Hebrew University of Jerusalem); Eduardo Paixao (TraCEr. MONREPOS-RGZM); Hannah Rausch (TraCEr. MONREPOS-RGZM); Jerome Robitaille (TraCEr. MONREPOS-RGZM); Lisa Schunk (University of Wroclaw)
Type: Paper, paper number: 111
Envisioning the forthcoming era of robotics and automation in archaeology: a position paper
Authors: Arianna Traviglia (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT))*; Ferdinando Cannella (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia)
Type: Paper, paper number: 332
Automated high-resolution ground-penetrating radar prospection with an uncrewed ground vehicle at an archaeological site
Authors: Lieven Verdonck (Archéologie et Philologie d’Orient et d’Occident, École normale supérieure, Paris)*; Michel Dabas (Archéologie et Philologie d’Orient et d’Occident, Ecole normale supérieure, Paris)
Type: Paper, paper number: 384
S15. Reproducing, Reusing, and Revising Code and Data in Archaeology
Efforts and outcomes to making the ROAD database reusable
Authors: Christian Sommer (Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities)*; Volker Hochschild (Uni Tübingen)
Type: Paper, paper number: 127
OpenHistoryMap – A case of reuse and refactoring
Authors: Silvia Bernardoni (Open History Map); Lucia Marsicano (Open History Map); Marco Montanari (Open History Map)*; Raffaele Trojanis (Open History Map)
Type: Paper, paper number: 154
Statistics, Data, and the History of the New Archaeology
Authors: James R Allison (Brigham Young University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 188
Percolation Package – From script sharing to package publication
Authors: Sophie C. Schmidt (Free University Berlin)*; Simon Maddison (University College London)
Type: Paper, paper number: 197
XRONOS: a global open repository enhancing reproducible research with chronometric data
Authors: Martin Hinz (CH)*; Joe Roe (University of Bern)
Type: Paper, paper number: 204
Implementing a Database and Information System in a Heavily Heterogeneous Research Data Environment
Authors: Steffen Strohm (Kiel University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 232
Detection of Temporal Changes of the Omega House at the Athenian Agora
Authors: Antigoni Panagiotopoulou (Information Management Systems Institute, Athena Research Center); Lemonia Ragia (Hellenic Open University); Dorina Moullou (GR)*; Colin Wallace (University of Waterloo)
Type: Paper, paper number: 276
An Example of Data Integration Using the ArchaMap Application
Authors: Robert Bischoff (Arizona State University)*; Matthew Peeples (Arizona State University); Daniel Hruschka (Arizona State University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 370
Citizen science supports megalithic research – virtual reconstructions through old photographs
Authors: Louise Tharandt (University of Cologne)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 13
S16. Archiving information on archaeological practices and knowledge work in the digital environment: workflows, paradata and beyond
Transforming the CIDOC-CRM model into a megalithic monument property graph
Authors: Ariele Câmara (ISCTE)*; Ana de Almeida (Iscte Instituto Universitário de Lisboa); João Oliveira (Iscte Instituto Universitário de Lisboa)
Type: Paper, paper number: 30
25 years of archiving: Exploring what people see as deposit worthy
Authors: Teagan K Zoldoske (Archaeology Data Service)*; Becky Hirst (Archaeology Data Service)
Type: Paper, paper number: 72
Successful archiving and management of paradata depends on your paradata-in-hand
Authors: Isto Huvila (SE)*; Zanna C Friberg (Uppsala university )
Type: Paper, paper number: 96
HORAI: An integrated management platform for historical information
Authors: Pablo del Fresno Bernal (Sistemes de Gestió del Patrimoni SCCL); Sonia Medina Gordo (Universitat de Barcelona, Institut d’Arqueologia)*; Esther Travé Allepuz (Universitat de Barcelona, Institut d’Arqueologia)
Type: Paper, paper number: 126
What digital does to the archaeological archive. A return of experience and the results of a recent research
Authors: Christophe TUFFERY (Inrap)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 129
A focus on the future of our tiny piece of the past: Digital Archiving of a long-term and multi-participant regional project
Authors: Scott Madry (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)*; Gregory Jansen (U. Maryland College Park); Seth Murray (North Carolina State University); Elizabeth Jones (UNC-Chapel Hill); Lia Willcoxon (North Carolina State University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 140
Research workflows, paradata, information visualisation: feedback on an exploratory integration of issues and practices
Authors: Iwona Dudek (CNRS)*; Jean-Yves BLAISE (CNRS)
Type: Paper, paper number: 221
Text Parsing Archaeological Legacy Data: A Software Methodology to Generate Maps from Handwritten Excavation Documentation
Authors: Emily Fletcher (Purdue University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 245
Reconstructing Acquarossa – Reconstructing in 3D as a methodology for organizing and interpreting legacy data
Authors: Maarten H. Sepers (University of Amsterdam)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 347
S18. Modelling Ancient Cities: methods, theories and tools
Visual communication on Hellenistic and Roman squares – The public spaces of Priene and Pompeii explored with 3D vector visibility analyses
Authors: Alexander Braun (University of Cologne)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 9
Identifying streets in precolonial urban space of Islamic East Africa
Authors: Monika Baumanova (University of West Bohemia)*
Type: Poster, paper number: 44
Does economic exchange drive settlement persistence patterns? Simulating patterns between Cyprus and the Levant during the Late Bronze Age
Authors: KATHERINE A. CRAWFORD (The Cyprus Institute)*; Georgios Artopoulos (The Cyprus Institute); Iza Romanowska (Aarhus University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 80
A multi-scale quantitative and transferable approach for the study of hillfort communities.
Authors: Giacomo Fontana (University College London)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 128
Modelling long-term patterns of urbanism in Anatolia: Conceptual and computational approaches
Authors: Dries Daems (Middle East Technical University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 135
Inequality of a townscape. Problem of assessment of living space in preindustrial cities.
Authors: Maria M. Legut-Pintal (Institute of Archaeology – University of Wroclaw)*; Mikołaj Grosel (Wrocław University of Science and Technology)
Type: Paper, paper number: 192
The city and the territory: settlement inter-relation of the centuries-old city of Pisae and its ager during pre-Roman and Roman era
Authors: Antonio Campus (University of Pisa)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 193
The urban side of child rearing: application of machine learning on sequential isotopic dentine data for pattern recognition related with weaning and physiological stress
Authors: Elissavet Ganiatsou (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace)*; Angelos Souleles (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace ); Angeliki Georgiadou (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace ); Asterios Aidonis ( Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace); Christina Papageorgopoulou (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace)
Type: Paper, paper number: 207
Multiproxy modelling of urban demography – the case study of Palmyra, Syria
Authors: Iza Romanowska (Aarhus Institute of Advanced Studies)*; Joan Campmany Jiménez (Aarhus University); Katarina Mokranova (Centre for Urban Network Evolutions (UrbNet), Aarhus University); Julia Steding (Aarhus University); Eivind Heldaas Seland (University of Bergen); Rubina Raja (Aarhus University)
Type: Poster, paper number: 262
On emergence of group agencies emerging through spatial interactions in location choice based systems
Authors: KAAREL SIKK (Kaarel Sikk)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 297
The part and parcels of a city. The impacts of urbanization on the population of ancient Thessaloniki
Authors: Asterios Aidonis ( Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace)*; Elissavet Ganiatsou (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace); Angelos Souleles (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace); Maria Korelidou (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace); Panagiota Bantavanou (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace); Angeliki Georgiadou (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace); Eleni Kalliga (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace); Christina Papageorgopoulou (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace)
Type: Paper, paper number: 323
A GIS approach to morphology and transformations of ancient cities. Some reflections from historical sources to spatial analysis
Authors: Angelo Cardone (Università degli Studi di Bari A. Moro)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 378
S20. Simulations for the past, simulations for the future
Studying the development of irrigation system in southern Mesopotamia
Authors: Dengxiao Lang (Delft University of Technology)*; Maurits Ertsen (Delft University of Technology)
Type: Poster, paper number: 11
Model transposability: Challenges and implications of transitioning socioecological system models to new regions.
Authors: Francesco Carrer (Newcastle University)*; Isaac IT Ullah (San Diego State University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 21
Was there economic thought in the Roman Empire? A comparison of proxy materials and simulated idealized network theories
Authors: Κatharina Zerzeropulos (Christian-Albrechts-University Kiel)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 31
AgModel: An Agent-Based Model of the forager-farmer transition.
Authors: Isaac IT Ullah (San Diego State University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 35
Hunter-gatherer impact on interglacial vegetation in Europe: agent-based model and sensitivity analysis
Authors: Anastasia Nikulina (Leiden University)*; Fulco Scherjon (NL); Katharine MacDonald (Leiden University); Anhelina Zapolska (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam); Maria Antonia Serge (University Toulouse Jean Jaurès); Marco Davoli (Aarhus University); Elena Pearce (Aarhus University); Dave van Wees (Vrije Universiteit); Wil Roebroeks (Leiden University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 62
A Mesolithic Homo Oeconomicus? First steps towards the simulation of Mesolithic Land-use perception
Authors: Gerrit Günther (CAU Kiel / CRC1266)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 114
An Agent-based model of pre-Columbian land-use in the Monumental Mound Region of Amazonian Bolivia
Authors: Joseph Matthew Hirst (University of Reading)*; Joy Singarayer (University of Reading); Umberto Lombardo (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona); Francis Mayle (University of Reading)
Type: Paper, paper number: 118
Modelling cooperation under climate constraints in the Paleolithic of Kazakhstan
Authors: Maria Coto-Sarmiento (University of Tübingen)*; Radu Iovita (New York University – University of Tübingen)
Type: Paper, paper number: 119
Modelling urban evolution – an agent-based approach to city-hinterland dynamics
Authors: Iza Romanowska (Aarhus Institute of Advanced Studies)*; Philip Verhagen (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)
Type: Paper, paper number: 253
Human substistence strategies and environmental sustainability in arid ecosystems: simulating Ju/’Hoansi-San traditional hunting practices
Authors: Lucía Cobo-Sánchez (University of Cologne)*; Eleftheria Paliou (University of Cologne); Oliver Vogels (University of Cologne); Tilman Lenssen-Erz (University of Cologne)
Type: Paper, paper number: 292
Moving through the mountains – An integrated GIS and Agent-based modelling approach to predict the location of Mesolithic sites in the Cairngorms, Scotland
Authors: Micheal Butler (University College Dublin)*; Alice Doughty (The University of Maine); Sam Kelley (University College Dublin); Martin Moucheron (University College Dublin); Graeme Warren (University College Dublin)
Type: Paper, paper number: 306
Simulation in the age of machine learning
Authors: Andreas Angourakis (Ruhr-Universität Bochum)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 334
S22. Machine and deep learning methods in archaeological research – creating an integrated community
From Fragment to Reconstruction using Neural Networks and Associative memories
Authors: Joan Anton Barcelo (UAB, Spain)*; DENIZ KAYIKCI (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona); Borja Urbistondo (Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona)
Type: Paper, paper number: 3
AI-on-Demand (AIOD) platform and its uses for cultural heritage
Authors: Edisa Lozić (ZRC SAZU)*; Benjamin Štular (ZRC SAZU); Gabriel Gonzalez Castane (Insight SFI Research Centre for Data Analytics)
Type: Paper, paper number: 17
Machine Learning for archaeological site detection: An Irish case study
Authors: Susan Curran (The Discovery Programme)*; Anthony Corns (The Discovery Programme); Žiga Kokalj (ZRC SAZU); Dragi Kocev (Bias Variance Labs, d.o.o); Nejc Čož (ZRC SAZU); Ivica Dimitrovski (Bias Variance Labs, d.o.o); Stephen Davis (UCD); Rob Shaw (The Discovery Programme); John O’Keeffe (The Discovery Programme); Ana Kostovska (Bias Variance Labs)
Type: Paper, paper number: 47
Chasing social complexity through body ornaments in the recent prehistory of Iberia. Implemantation of an archaeochemical tool for prehistoric data analysis and predictive modelling
Authors: Daniel Sánchez Gómez (University of Seville)*; Galo Romero-García (Universidad de Sevilla); José Angel Garrido (University of Seville); Carlos P Odriozola (University of Seville)
Type: Paper, paper number: 53
Automated detection of archaeological sites using LiDAR – addressing False Positives
Authors: Fabricio Botelho (Universidade de Aveiro); Daniel D Canedo (University of Aveiro)*; Petia Georgieva (University of Aveiro); Joao Fonte (Universidade da Maia); Luis Seco (Universidade da Maia); Marta Vázquez (Universidade da Maia); Rita Dias (ERA Arqueologia); Tiago Pereiro (ERA Arqueologia); João Hipólito (ERA Arqueologia); José Machado (ERA Arqueologia); António Neves (Universidade de Aveiro)
Type: Paper, paper number: 58
Automated Archaeological Feature Detection Using Artificial Intelligence on UAV Imagery: Preliminary Results
Authors: ARGYRO ARGYROU (Cyprus University of Technology)*; Athos Agapiou (Cyprus University of Technology)
Type: Paper, paper number: 68
HillfortFinderApp and site detection across Europe – latest results from a Deep Learning based hillfort search
Authors: Jürgen Landauer (Landauer Research)*; Giacomo Fontana (University College London); Simon Maddison (University College London); Axel G. Posluschny (Keltenwelt am Glauberg)
Type: Paper, paper number: 113
Predicting the Biome: a new machine learning approach to animal depictions in rock art
Authors: Mirte Korpershoek (Bournemouth University)*; Marcin Budka (Bournemouth University); Phil Riris (University of Bournemouth); Sally Reynolds (Bournemouth University)
Type: Poster, paper number: 134
Classification of pottery assemblages in archaeology: a machine learning approach
Authors: Guilherme D Curra (Leiden University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 138
Building a toolkit for ML-integrated archaeological workflows: the contribution of human-centred approaches
Authors: Lucy Killoran (University of Glasgow)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 155
Creating an additional class layer with machine learning to counter overfitting in an unbalanced ancient coin dataset
Authors: Sebastian Gampe (Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main )*; Karsten Tolle (Goethe-University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 160
A META LEARNING APPROACH FOR HITTITE MONUMENTAL STONE RELIEFS FOR IDENTIFICATION AND CLASSIFICATION
Authors: Deniz Kayikci (Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona)*; Joan Anton Barcelo (UAB, Spain)
Type: Paper, paper number: 167
Characterizing stylistic evolution via Approximate Bayesian Computation and Random Forest Adjustment
Authors: Simon Carrignon (McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge)*; R. Alexander Bentley (University of Tennessee, Knoxville); Michael J. O’Brien (Texas A&M University, San Antonio)
Type: Paper, paper number: 198
From unsupervised to supervised: Supporting the analysis of a large coin hoard with AI-based methods. Part 2
Authors: Chrisowalandis Deligio (Goethe Universität Frankfurt am Main)*; Karsten Tolle (Goethe-University); Dr. David Wigg-Wolf (Römisch-Germanische Kommission, Frankfurt am Main)
Type: Paper, paper number: 217
A comparison of machine learning and rule-based approaches for text mining in the archaeology domain, across three languages
Authors: Alex Brandsen (Universiteit Leiden)*; Andreas Vlachidis (UCL); Alphaeus G W Lien-Talks (University of York, Historic England, Archaeology Data Service)
Type: Paper, paper number: 233
Automated Recognition of Archaeological Traces in Southeast Asia from Airborne Lidar
Authors: Damian Evans (EFEO)*; Vladyslav Sydorov (EFEO); Tommaso Pappagallo (EFEO); Ladislas Letourneur (EFEO); Sarah Klassen (University of Toronto)
Type: Paper, paper number: 238
3D Deep Learning using Airborne Lidar for Ancient Maya Sites in Tropical Regions
Authors: Heather Richards-Rissetto (University of Nebraska-Lincoln)*; David Newton (University of Nebraska-Lincoln); Amy E. Thompson (University of Texas at Austin); Sanyam Agrawal (University of Nebraska-Lincoln); Keith Prufer (University of New Mexcio)
Type: Paper, paper number: 265
Amphoraefinder – Roman amphorae identification through Convolutional Neural Networks
Authors: Diogo Nunes (Instituto Superior Técnico); Joel Santos (University of Leicester)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 328
Creating an accurate, well-defined and documented Assyriological Dataset for ML applications: is it for all?
Authors: Diego Chinellato (Ca’ Foscari University); Sara Ferro (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT))*; Homa Davoudi (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT)); Arianna Traviglia (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT))
Type: Paper, paper number: 330
Semantic Computing Solutions for Opening Archaeological Citizen Science Data
Authors: Eljas Oksanen (University of Helsinki)*; Frida Ehrnsten; Heikki Rantala (Aalto University); Eero Hyvonen (Aalto University and University of Helsinki)
Type: Paper, paper number: 342
Generalisation Capability of Semantic Segmentation Methods for the Identification of Archaeological Structures on Remote Sensing Data
Authors: Gregory Sech (Italian Institute of Technology); Paolo Soleni (Italian Institute of Technology); Marco Fiorucci (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia); Sara Ferro (Italian Institute of Technology / University of Venece)*; Arianna Traviglia (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT))
Type: Paper, paper number: 351
Generative models applied to the reconstruction of profiles of iberian pottery fragments
Authors: José M. Fuertes (Universidad de Jaén)*; Manuel Lucena (Universidad de Jaén); Pablo Navarro (CENPAT – CONICET); Celia Cintas (IBM Research Africa)
Type: Poster, paper number: 360
Machine learning for UAV-captured imagery: an outgrowth of XRchaeology 2019-2022
Authors: Kayeleigh Sharp (Northern Arizona University)*; Hossein Eslamiat (Southern Illinois University); Carlos Osores Mendives (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú); Bijay Raj Paudel (Southern Illinois University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 376
S23. Understanding Archaeological Site Topography: 3D Archaeology of Archaeology
Rijckholt in 3D: The role of close-range photogrammetry within the archaeological trajectory of Limburg’s Flintmines
Authors: Alicia Walsh (Recollection Heritage)*; Joep Orbons (ArcheoPro); René Haemers (Subterranean Dynamics)
Type: Paper, paper number: 37
AT THE EDGE OF A CITY THE DIGITAL STORYLINE OF THE BRONTOCHION MONASTERY OF MYSTRAS
Authors: Vayia V Panagiotidis (University of the Peloponnese)*; Vasiliki Valantou (University of the Peloponnese); Anastasios Kazolias (University of the Peloponnese); Nikolaos Zacharias (University of the Peloponnese)
Type: Paper, paper number: 71
Round table: S23. Understanding Archaeological Site Topography: 3D Archaeology of Archaeology
Authors: Teagan K Zoldoske (Archaeology Data Service)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 74
3D DOCUMENTATION AND PUBLIC ARCHAEOLOGY AT THE EPONIMOUS SITE OF CUCUTENI CULTURE
Authors: Radu A Brunchi (Alexandru Ioan Cuza University)*; Casandra Brasoveanu (UAIC); Andrei Asandulesei (UAIC); Felix Tencariu (UAIC)
Type: Paper, paper number: 224
Photogrammetric terrain model of the San Isidro site in El Salvador. Data processing and archaeological analysis
Authors: Joachim Martecki (University of Warsaw)*
Type: Poster, paper number: 231
Interpreting geophysical survey data with the help of old site photography – a case study from acient Napata in northern Sudan
Authors: Pawel Wolf (none)*; Burkart Ullrich (Eastern Atlas)
Type: Paper, paper number: 274
Archaeology of Archaeology at Heloros: Re-interpreting the Urban Layout of a Complex Greek Settlement in Sicily using Proximal Sensing and Data Fusion
Authors: Nicola Lercari (Institute for Digital Cultural Heritage Studies – LMU Munich); Davide Tanasi ()*; Till Sonnemann (Bonn University); Stephan Hassam (University of South Florida); Dario Calderone (Institute for Digital Cultural Heritage Studies – LMU Munich); Paolino Trapani (Università degli studi di Catania ); Lena Ruider (Institute for Digital Cultural Heritage Studies – LMU Munich); Rosa Lanteri (5Parco Archeologico e Paesaggistico di Siracusa, Eloro, Villa del Tellaro e Akrai)
Type: Paper, paper number: 327
S24. How Are Archaeological Narratives about the Past Constructed? – Analysing Argumentation in Archaeology
Deconstructing the constructed: Focused coding as a methodological tool to analyze archaeological narratives
Authors: Yashaswini Jayadevaiah (Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur (IITK))*; Koumudi Patil (Design programme IIT Kanpur)
Type: Paper, paper number: 152
Vagueness and Uncertainty in Linked Open Data – its effects on semantic modelling, performance, classification and meaning
Authors: David Wigg-Wolf (DE)*; Karsten Tolle (Goethe-University); Florian Thiery (LEIZA); Allard Mees (LEIZA)
Type: Paper, paper number: 261
S26. For a Bright Future: Challenges and Solutions for the Long-Term Preservation of 3D and Other Complex Data in Digital Cultural Heritage
ᚐᚏᚉᚆᚔᚃᚓ: Reusing and Building Reusability of data into the OG(H)AM project archive
Authors: Megan N Kasten (University of Glasgow)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 196
Ancient Images 2.0 – Digital preservation of Gotland’s Picturestones
Authors: Michael Fergusson (Viospatia AB)*; Henrik Jansson (Gotlands Museum)
Type: Paper, paper number: 203
Building a FLOSS Multi/Metaverse for Cultural Heritage: MAPOD4D
Authors: Marco Moderato (DISPUTER – Università di Chieti)*; Roberto Taglioretti (ArcheOs Tec); Alessandra Mazzucchi (ArcheOs Tec); Vasco La Salvia (DISPUTER – Università di Chieti); Edoardo Olmo Puricelli (Osteoarc-APS); Caterina Giostra (Dipartimento di Storia, Archeologia e Storia dell’arte Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milano)
Type: Paper, paper number: 240
Archiving the Third Dimension
Authors: Esther Schoenenberger (Archaeology and heritage management for the canton of Zurich)*; Raphael Annaheim (Archaeology and heritage management for the canton of Zurich)
Type: Paper, paper number: 254
Experiences from the BItFROST Project: Developing a 3D repository at the Museum of Cultural History
Authors: Letizia Bonelli (Museum of Cultural History)*; Hallvard R Indgjerd (Museum of Cultural History, University of Oslo); Alexis Pantos (Museum of Cultural History); Espen Uleberg (NO)
Type: Paper, paper number: 309
Smithsonian’s Packrat: How to have your 3D cake and eat it too
Authors: Jonathan W Blundell (Smithsonian Instution)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 374
S27. Exploring new ways of visualizing archaeological data
Another pair of eyes. Approaching the Sagalassos settlement data through a customized “SiteVis” visualization
Authors: Ralf Vandam (VUB)*; Georgia Panagiotidou (UCL); Andrew Vande Moere (KU Leuven); Jeroen Poblome (KU Leuven)
Type: Paper, paper number: 143
Implementing Digital Documentation Techniques for Archaeological Artifacts to Develop a Virtual Exhibition: the Necropolis of Baley Collection
Authors: Miglena Raykovska (Institute of Information and Communication Technologies – Bulgarian Academy of Science & National Archaeological Institute with Museum – Bulgarian Academy of Sciences)*; Kristen Jones (Queen’s University Department of Geography & Planning); Hristina Klecherova (Institute of Information and Communication Technologies – Bulgarian Academy of Sciences); Stefan Alexandrov (National Archaeological Institute with Museum – Bulgarian Academy of Sciences); Nikolay Petkov (Institute of Information and Communication Technologies – Bulgarian Academy of Sciences); Tanya Hristova (National Archaeological Institute with Museum – Bulgarian Academy of Sciences); Georgi Ivanov (National Archaeological Institute with Museum – Bulgarian Academy of Sciences)
Type: Poster, paper number: 161
Playing ‘Fun Games with Time and Space’: Digital Assemblages of the O.G.S. Crawford Archive
Authors: Beth Hodgett (Birkbeck)*; Karl Smith (University of Oxford); Katie Campbell (Cambridge); Adam Dawson (University of Oxford)
Type: Paper, paper number: 185
Radiocarbon approaches for visualizing long-term changes in prehistoric ceramics: challenges and opportunities
Authors: Beatrijs G de Groot (University of Edinburgh)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 219
Visual encoding of a 3D virtual reconstruction’s scientific justification: feedback from a proof-of-concept research
Authors: Jean-Yves BLAISE (CNRS)*; Iwona Dudek (CNRS); Simon Gaël (CITERES – LAT, University of Tours); Laurent Bergerot (CNRS)
Type: Paper, paper number: 226
Querying the Past—using Artificial Intelligence to Identify Architecture
Authors: Aaron Pattee (ALudwig-Maximilians-University in Munich)*; Cindy Kroeber (Friedrich-Schiller-University in Jena); Jonas Bruschke (Julius-Maximilian-University in Würzburg); Ronja Utescher (University of Bielefeld); Ferdinand Maiwald (Friedrich-Schiller-University in Jena); Sina Zarriess (Friedrich Schiller University Jena); Stephan Hoppe (Ludwig-Maximilians-University in Munich); Florian Niebling (Julius-Maximilian-University in Würzburg); Sander Münster (Friedrich-Schiller-University in Jena)
Type: Paper, paper number: 235
S29. How do we ensure archaeological data are usable and Reusable, and for whom? Putting the R in FAIR for archaeology’s data
The reusability of geospatial data in archaeology using web applications: PEPAdb.
Authors: Galo Romero-García (Universidad de Sevilla)*; Daniel Sánchez Gómez (University of Seville); José Ángel Garrido-Cordero (Universidad de Sevilla); Carlos P. Odriozola (Universidad de Sevilla)
Type: Paper, paper number: 52
True integration: moving from just finding archives to interpreting archaeological documentation utilising CRMarchaeo
Authors: Jane Jansen (Statens Historiska Museer Arkeologerna)*; Stephen Stead (GB)
Type: Paper, paper number: 10
Data from the past? The challenge of reusing the Finnish Heritage Agency’s archaeological data
Authors: Johanna Roiha (University of Helsinki)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 26
“Is this your first visit to Avebury?” – Creating, Using, and Reusing Archaeological Data in the Avebury Papers
Authors: Fran Allfrey (University of York)*; Ben Chan (University of Bournemouth); Ros Cleal (National Trust); Mark Gillings (University of Bournemouth); Colleen Morgan (GB)
Type: Paper, paper number: 27
Managing Archaeological Knowledge: A Researcher’s Perspective
Authors: Meliha Handzic (International Burch University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 38
How Can Imagination Lead Us from Description to Interpretation in Archaeological Practice?
Authors: Tessa Poller (University of Glasgow)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 66
The understanding of re-use and barriers to re-use of archaeological data. The quality in use methodological approach
Authors: Rimvydas Lauzikas (Vilnius University Faculty of Communication)*; Kristy-Lee Seaton (University of York); Holly Wright (University of York); Keith May (Historic England); Peter McKeague (Historic Environment Scotland); Vera Moitinho de Almeida (University of Porto)
Type: Paper, paper number: 67
High Speed 2 vs Unpath’d Waters: keeping large projects FAIR
Authors: Evelyn A Curl (Archaeology Data Service)*; Teagan K Zoldoske (Archaeology Data Service); Jamie G Geddes (Archaeology Data Service)
Type: Paper, paper number: 73
Friction, Stiction, and Maybe Some Fiction: Travels and Travails in Digital Data
Authors: Jeremy Huggett (University of Glasgow)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 103
Translating established collaborative research practices towards global data sharing initiatives
Authors: Zachary Batist (University of Toronto)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 171
From thesaurus to semantic network: make (re)usable the ANRJCJC Itineris data
Authors: Cicolani Veronica (CNRS); Thomas Huet (University of Oxford, School of Archaeology)*; Guillaume Reich (Frantiq); Sebastien Durost (Bibracte)
Type: Paper, paper number: 194
The Dynamic Collections – a 3D Web Platform of Archaeological Artefacts designed for Data Reuse and Deep Interaction.
Authors: Marco Callieri (ISTI-CNR)*; Åsa Berggren (Lund University); Nicolò NDU Dell’Unto (Department of Archaeology and Ancient History, Lund University); Paola Derudas (Lund University); Domenica Dininno (Lund University); Fredrik Ekengren (Lund University); Giuseppe Naponiello (Lund Unicersity)
Type: Paper, paper number: 251
How FAIR is bioarchaeological data: with a particular emphasis on making archaeological science data reusable
Authors: Alphaeus G W Lien-Talks (University of York, Historic England, Archaeology Data Service)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 275
FAIRing Information Objects through Designated Communities
Authors: Javier Pereda (Towards a National Collection)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 287
A single best narrative – or a multitude of stories?
Authors: Ingvild S Andreassen (Museum of cultural history, University of Oslo)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 288
Reuse and the Archaeology Data Service
Authors: Holly Wright (University of York)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 293
The Penfield African American Cemetery Project: Geophysics and Digital Archives for the Public
Authors:
Robert Theberge* (Georgia State University), Jeffrey Glover (Georgia State University), Spencer Roberts (Emory University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 308
Digital Marginalia in Archaeological Archives
Authors: Sveta Matskevich (IAA)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 325
Urban Deep Mapping: The Potential for Meaning Making and Social Benefit in Urban Archive Reuse
Authors: Claire Boardman (University of York)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 335
Reuse of photogrammetric data seen from different perspectives: creators, repository providers and users
Authors: Andreas Noback (Technical University of Darmstadt)*; Claudia A. Maechler (Technical University of Darmstadt)
Type: Paper, paper number: 348
S30. Crossing Landscapes of the Past: Developments in Modelling Mobility and Connectivity in Archaeology
Where the grass is greener – large-scale phenological patterns and their explanatory potential for the distribution of Paleolithic hunter-gatherers in Europe
Authors: Andreas Maier (Universität zu Köln)*; Vlad Krakov (Simon Fraser University); Florian Linsel (Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, Institute of Computer Science); Patrick Ludwig (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology); Louise Tharandt (University of Cologne)
Type: Paper, paper number: 14
Mobility as evidence of the cultural in the natural: The complexity of the transhumant landscape in the Sierra de Cebollera Natural Park (La Rioja, Spain)
Authors: Andrea Solana-Muñoz (Incipit-CSIC)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 29
Should I Stay or Should I Go – Settlement and Trade Patterns on the Lower Danube Between the Late 3rd and Early 5th centuries AD
Authors: Paul Vadineanu (Universität Zu Köln)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 45
“It’s fine on a good day!” – Perceived risk and route choice among Viking Age seafarers. Potentials of digital mapping and experimental archaeology.
Authors: Greer K Jarrett (Lund University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 55
Putting the donkey before the cart: exploring Roman roads using large digital road dataset
Authors: Adam Pažout (Centre for Urban Network Evolutions)*; Tom Brughmans (Aarhus University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 101
Convolutional multi-factor probabilistic time-aware corridors: a new approach to the analysis of past long-distance mobility
Authors: Hector A. Orengo (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology)*; Toby C Wilkinson (Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology)
Type: Paper, paper number: 136
A connecting sea: circuit theory and maritime exchange and mobility in the Roman Adriatic
Authors: Andrew McLean (University of Edinburgh)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 199
Rivers vs. Roads? Assessing accuracy in route network models of transport in the Roman period.
Authors: James R. Page (University of Edinburgh)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 272
MADO applications in the FBA-EIA transition in the Portuguese Beira Interior and the Spanish Alta Extremadura: a multi-scalar analysis of the Iberian warrior stelae
Authors: Pedro Baptista (Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 290
Landscapes, Networks, and Society along the Ancient Libyan Sea: the PERAIA Project
Authors: David L Laguna-Palma (Department of Prehistory and Archaeology)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 300
Identifying Reasons for Lack of Least-cost path success: A case study from Germany
Authors: Irmela Herzog (LVR-Amt für Bodendenkmalpflege im Rheinland)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 319
Informing hunter-gatherer LCP models through indigenous knowledge
Authors: Oliver Vogels (University of Cologne)*; Tilman Lenssen-Erz (University of Cologne); Eleftheria Paliou (University of Cologne)
Type: Paper, paper number: 322
Modelling connectivity in ancient regions through the application of Beta-Skeletons
Authors: Diego Jimenez-Badillo (National Institute of Anthropology and History of Mexico)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 357
Addressing the Koriabo pottery distribution by means of Least-Cost-Path Analysis
Authors: Bruno S Barreto (University of Bonn / University of São Paulo)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 365
S31. Better Together: Exploring methods and applications for the synergy of multiproxy data in the study of archaeological mobilities
An approach to establishing a workflow pipeline for synergistic analysis of osteological and biochemical data. The case study of Amvrakia in the context of Corinthian colonisation between 625-200 BC in Epirus, Greece.
Authors: Kiriakos Xanthopoulos (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace)*; Angeliki Georgiadou (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace); Christina Papageorgopoulou (Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Department of History and Ethnology, Democritus University of Thrace)
Type: Paper, paper number: 191
Integrating multiproxy data to improve isotope-based geographic assignment approaches
Authors: Jason Laffoon (Leiden University)*; Till Sonnemann (University of Bonn)
Type: Paper, paper number: 200
S32. A Bridge too Far. Heritage, Historical and Criminal Network Research
Why did cities evolve in Gharb Al-Andalus? Network analysis as a potential method for charting city growth
Authors: Joel Santos (University of Leicester)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 78
The impact of Levantine transit trade on 16th century Transylvania, Wallachia and Moldova
Authors: Daria Stefan (TU Wien)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 112
Challenges in Building Akkadian Co-Occurence Networks for Comparative Research
Authors: Ellie Bennett (University of Helsinki)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 121
Networks of Hittites: Rivers, Mountains, and Cities
Authors: Ali Akman (Bilkent University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 141
Travelling the wine dark sea – Networks of Mobility in the Late Bronze Age Mediterranean
Authors: Paula Gheorghiade (University of Helsinki)*; Christine Spencer (University College London)
Type: Paper, paper number: 242
Characterising Peasant Economies in the north of Roman Spain through Network Science
Authors: Fernando Moreno-Navarro (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 257
Disentangle the Net: How Social Network Analysis Can Help Understand and Fight the Illicit Trafficking in Antiquities
Authors: Riccardo Giovanelli (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice); Michela De Bernardin (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia)*; Arianna Traviglia (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT))
Type: Paper, paper number: 279
S33. Bayesian Inference in Archaeology: new applications and challenges
Variation in Archaeology and Osteoarchaeology: using Bayesian Hierarchical Modelling to explore variation in dental tissues
Authors: Christianne L Fernee (University of Bristol)*; Kate Robson Brown (University of Bristol )
Type: Paper, paper number: 125
Modelling Roman Roads in Roman Britain
Authors: Joseph Lewis (University of Cambridge)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 176
Spatial Autocorrelation and Cultural Boundaries: detecting Japanese burial tradition areas during the Jomon-Yayoi transition
Authors: Simon Carrignon (McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge)*; Shinya Shoda (Nara National Research Institute for Cultural Properties); Mariko Yamamoto-Wilkins (University of Cambridge); Enrico R Crema (University of Cambridge)
Type: Paper, paper number: 205
How do you cultivate? The ecological niche for rice in Yayoi period Japan via multi-proxy species distribution modelling
Authors: Leah Brainerd (University of Cambridge)*; Simon Carrignon (McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge); Marco Madella (Universitat Pompeu Fabra); Akihiro Yoshida (Kagoshima University); Enrico R Crema (University of Cambridge)
Type: Paper, paper number: 280
Inequality in prehistoric Japan: estimating Gini coefficients from pit dwellings using a Bayesian hierarchical model
Authors: Charles Simmons (University of Cambridge)*; Enrico R Crema (University of Cambridge)
Type: Paper, paper number: 289
Bayesian mixing models as a tool to explore the Bronze Age bitumen trade.
Authors: Adrià Breu (Autonomous University of Barcelona)*; Anna Bach (Autonomous University of Barcelona); Zidan Bradosty (Salahaddin University); Aziz Zebari (Salahaddin University); Hawkar Abdullrahman (Salahaddin University); Miquel Molist (Autonomous University of Barcelona)
Type: Paper, paper number: 302
Inferring shellfishing seasonality from the isotopic composition of biogenic carbonate: a Bayesian approach
Authors: Gabriel D Lewis (University of Massachusetts, Amherst); Jordan F Brown (University of California, Berkeley)*
Type: Poster, paper number: 366
S34. Computational Approaches and Remote Sensing Applications in Desertic Areas
UAV Platform Application in Large Area Archaeological Field Surveys of Arid and Semi-arid Landscapes in Israel
Authors: emil aladjem (IAA)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 7
Mapping desertification in Southern Morocco using Google Earth Engine
Authors: Louise Rayne (Newcastle University)*; Filippo Brandolini (Newcastle University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 25
Detecting change with Google Earth Engine in the desert regions of North Africa
Authors: Nichole Sheldrick (University of Leicester)*; Ahmed Mahmoud (University of Leicester); Louise Rayne (Newcastle University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 61
Near East irrigation studies beyond SRTM and CORONA. Preliminary results of the UnderTheSands project
Authors: Nazarij Bulawka (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology)*; Hector A. Orengo (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology)
Type: Paper, paper number: 115
Spatial soil information as a proxy for archaeological predictive modelling in arid regions: the Serevani plain example (Kurdistan, Iraq)
Authors: Mathias Bellat (University of Tübingen)*; Benjamin Glissmann (Tübingen University); Ruhollah Taghizadeh-Mehrjardi (Tübingen University); Tobias Rentschler (Tübingen Unviersity); Paola Sconzo (Università degli studi di Palermo); Peter Pfälzner (Tübingen University); Thomas Scholten (University of Tübingen)
Type: Poster, paper number: 117
All at stake: Predicting the risks and vulnerabilities of northeastern African archaeological sites and their relationship to human-environmental processes
Authors: David L Laguna-Palma (Department of Prehistory and Archaeology)*; Olga Palacios (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona); Katarina Mokranova (Centre for Urban Network Evolutions (UrbNet), Aarhus University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 243
VHR satellite imagery-based detection of archaeological sites looting in desertic regions via Deep Learning approaches.
Authors: Arianna Traviglia (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT))*; Maria Cristina Salvi (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia); Marco Fiorucci (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia); Gregory Sech (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia); Ayesha Anwar (Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia); Riccardo Giovanelli (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia); Michela De Bernardin (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia)
Type: Paper, paper number: 318
Assessing detection rates of Holocene archaeological structures from various satellite imagery sources, along the southern edge of the Nefud Desert.
Authors: Amy G Hatton (Max Planck Institute for Geoanthropology)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 321
Study and enhancement of the heritage value of a fortified settlement along the Limes Arabicus. Umm ar-Rasas (Amman, Jordan) between remote sensing and photogrammetry.
Authors: Francesca Di Palma (University of Bari Aldo Moro)*; Giuseppe Scardozzi (CNR-ISPC (Institute for Heritage Science)); Roberto Gabrielli (Institute of Heritage Science of the Italian National Research Council (CNR-ISPC) ); Pasquale P Merola (CNR/Institute of Heritage Science); Ilaria Miccoli (Institute of Heritage Science of the Italian National Research Council (CNR-ISPC) )
Type: Paper, paper number: 336
Digital atlas of the invisible cultural heritage in Morocco region
Authors: Pasquale P Merola (CNR/Institute of Heritage Science)*; Lorenza Ilia Manfredi (CNR/Institute of Heritage Science); Ilaria Miccoli (CNR/Institute of Heritage Science)
Type: Poster, paper number: 355
Integrated remote sensing approaches and near-surface geophysical survey for large-scale assessment of cultural heritage: A case study from central Arizona
Authors: Tamas Polanyi (Sandbox Archaeology)*; Shelby Manney (Arizona Army National Guard)
Type: Paper, paper number: 358
The preliminary results of application of remote sensing and machine learning methods in the studies of flint mining landscape in Egypt
Authors: Sylwia Buławka (Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of Polish Academy of Sciences)*; Nazarij Bulawka (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology)
Type: Poster, paper number: 363
Remote sensing based approaches for the automatic extraction and characterization of archaeological looting features: the coastal desert of Peru
Authors: Nicola Masini (CNR-ISPC); Alessia Brucato (UNIBA – CNR ISPC)*; Rosa Lasaponara (CNR-IMAA)
Type: Paper, paper number: 383
S35. Indigenous Knowledge and Digital Archaeology: potential, problems and prospects
Understanding the national, regional and local sea level rise risk to coastal archaeology: a case study from Aotearoa / New Zealand.
Authors: Ben D Jones (University of Auckland)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 1
Indigenous Data Sovereignty: Indigenizing Anthropological Data Collection and Management Practices
Authors: Lindsay M Montgomery (University of Toronto)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 23
Gaming for submerged ancient landscapes in Australia
Authors: John McCarthy (Flinders University)*; Michael O’Leary (University of Western Australia); Ulysse Lebrec (University of Western Australia)
Type: Paper, paper number: 24
Our Tuesday Meetings: Discussing Collaboration for Digital Heritage Research at the former Old Sun Indian Residential School, Alberta Canada
Authors: Madisen Hvidberg (University of Calgary)*; Angeline Ayoungman (Old Sun Community College); Gwendora Bear Chief (Old Sun Community College); Peter Dawson (University of Calgary)
Type: Paper, paper number: 81
Community-Oriented Approaches for Digital Documentation of Indigenous Hunting Ice Patch Landscapes
Authors: Kelsey A Pennanen (University of Calgary)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 130
Simulating pastoral landscapes: ethnoarchaeology and computer modelling in the Aspromonte Massif (Southern Italy)
Authors: Guillem Domingo-Ribas (Newcastle University)*; Francesco Carrer (GB)
Type: Paper, paper number: 172
Towards Collaborative Archaeogame Design and Development: Iteration, Innovation and the Southern Jê
Authors: Priscilla Ulguim (Vrije Universiteit Brussel)*; Juan Hiriart (University of Salford); Florencio Fernandes (Terra Indígena Rio das Cobras); Claudia Parellada (Museu Paranaense); Juliana Salles Machado (Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina); Silvia Copé (Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul); Fabíola SIlva (Museu de Arqueologia e Etnologia da Universidade de São Paulo)
Type: Paper, paper number: 227
Stories from St Augustine’s College: Negotiating global memorialisation in digital archaeology
Authors: Catriona E Cooper (Canterbury Christ Church University)*; Abi Kingsnorth (Canterbury Chirst Church University); Ralph Norman (Canterbury Christ Church University); David van Krieken Vannerley (Canterbury Christ Church University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 267
Bringing indigenous knowledge into computational models of hunter-gatherer mobility and behaviour
Authors: Eleftheria Paliou (University of Cologne)*; Oliver Vogels (University of Cologne); Lucía Cobo-Sánchez (University of Cologne); Tilman Lenssen-Erz (University of Cologne)
Type: Paper, paper number: 356
S36. Where do you go to my lovely? From punch card technology to Deep Learning. Tracing the development of statistical thinking in(to Computational) Archaeology
PyREnArA – Spatio-temporal analysis of artefact morphology with multivariate approaches
Authors: Robin John (University of Cologne – Department of Prehistoric Archaeology)*; Florian Linsel (Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, Institute of Computer Science); Hubert Mara (MLU – Instiut für Informatik); Georg Roth (Freie Universität Berlin – Institute of Prehistoric Archaeology); Isabell Schmidt (University of Cologne – Department of Prehistoric Archaeology); Andreas Maier (Universität zu Köln)
Type: Paper, paper number: 50
A personal review of 50 years of archaeology & statistics & archaeological IT in Germany: attempt to take stock, attempt to formulate an agenda
Authors: Frank Siegmund (WWU Münster)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 150
The application of CLR and ILR transformations in the compositional analysis of geochemical data
Authors: Laszlo Ferenczi (Univerzita Karlova)*; Martin Janovsky (Univerzita Karlova); Jan Horak (Czech University of Life Sciences Prague)
Type: Poster, paper number: 268
Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) and multiscalar statistics (Ripley´s K-function) as tools for understanding socio-economic relations by Middle Danube Germanic tribes and Slavs (1st Millenium AD. Central Europe)
Authors: Marek Hladík (Institute of Archaeology, Czech Acad Sci Brno)*; Katarína Hladíková (Department of Archaeology, Comenius University in Bratislava)
Type: Paper, paper number: 338
S37. Modelling the semantics of space – the relationship of entities creating space
Spatial statistical analysis of shipwreck sites: a methodological proposal
Authors: José Bettencourt (CHAM, FCSH, Lisbon Nova University); Joel Santos (University of Leicester)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 79
Creating and framing post-colonial space: “Augustus in Saigon!?” as a students’ online exhibition
Authors: Elisabeth Günther (University of Trier)*; Sven Günther (Institute for the History of Ancient Civilizations (IHAC), NENU)
Type: Paper, paper number: 162
Point Process Modelling of human-landscape relations in Eastern Crete
Authors: Andriana-Maria Xenaki (University of Cambridge)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 252
Do we need an extended ontology for the archaeology of ancient religions? Data modelling and visualization techniques of Roman religious spaces
Authors: Asuman Lätzer-Lasar (Philipps-University Marburg, Classical Archaeology)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 260
Timescape of the settlement of Pancarlık : time and space of entities creating landscape
Authors: Anais Lamesa (IFEA)*; Idil Üçbaşaran (Ortahisar Belediyesi)
Type: Paper, paper number: 277
Spaces of funeral meaning. Modelling socio-spatial relations in burial contexts
Authors: Aline Deicke (University of Marburg)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 284
Quantifying the economy of Roman circuses – a digital approach to the study of space to evaluate the phenomena of resilience and identity of the Roman provinces.
Authors: Domenica Dininno (Lund University)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 368
S38. Computational Modeling of Water-Based Movement
Agency in Flow. River Oriented Land Use Decisions During the Late Upper Palaeolithic and Late Palaeolithic in the Middle Rhine Valley
Authors: Tjaark Siemssen (University of Oxford)*; Andreas Maier (Universität zu Köln)
Type: Paper, paper number: 169
Any Port in a Storm? Investigating Voyage-Planning with an Agent-Based Navigation Model
Authors: Karl J Smith (University of Oxford)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 178
A Framework for Modeling/Simulating Controls, Patterns and Consequences of Maritime Human Mobility Potential in Early Prehistory
Authors: Phaedon Kyriakidis (CUT)*; Elias Gravanis (Cyprus University of Technology)
Type: Paper, paper number: 312
Seaing the Value of Communities of Practice: Connecting computational archeology research to community engagement and seafaring practitioner expertise
Authors: Emma Slayton (US)*; Marisa Borreggine (Harvard University ); Helen Farr (University of Southampton); Katherine Jarriel (Purdue University); Justin Leidwanger (Standford University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 326
The State of the Field of Seafaring Modeling: Conversations from the CAST Workshop
Authors: Katherine Jarriel (Purdue University)*; Marisa Borreggine (Harvard University); Helen Farr (University of Southampton); Justin Leidwanger (Stanford University); Emma Slayton (US)
Type: Paper, paper number: 349
S39. Web-database solutions for the excavation datasets
Excavation Databases and Numismatic Needs: Case of Marea Archaeological Project
Authors: Szymon P Jellonek (University of Warsaw)*; Barbara Zając (National Museum in Kraków)
Type: Paper, paper number: 28
AIR: a web-based data management solution for (multiple) archaeological excavations
Authors: Paola Derudas (Lund University)*; Federico Nurra (Institut national d’histoire de l’art (INHA))
Type: Paper, paper number: 239
MA-P vs. Arches. An open source data management platform for MA-P (“Maloutena and Agora in the layout of Paphos: modeling the cityscape of the Hellenistic and Roman capital of Cyprus”) project (Nea Paphos, Cyprus)
Authors: Pawel PL Lech (Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology)*; Łukasz Miszk (Jagiellonian University in Kraków); Wojciech Ostrowski (Warsaw University of Technology)
Type: Paper, paper number: 301
DAISY 2.0: A field database solution for an archaeological institution
Authors: Adrian Chlebowski (The Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology, University of Warsaw ); Maciej Krawczyk (Faculty of History, University of Warsaw); Robert Mahler (Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology, University of Warsaw)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 303
Back to DIY: Beyond turnkey web solutions
Authors: Hallvard R Indgjerd (Museum of Cultural History, University of Oslo)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 373
Dealing with old and new excavation datasets: the TiMMA web-database
Authors: Bastien Rueff (Ecole française d’Athènes)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 382
S41. Capacity building for open data persistence in archaeology
ACCESSIBILITY AND OPENNESS OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL HERITAGE DATA IN SERBIA
Authors: Milica Tapavicki-Ilic (Institute of Archaeology); Marija Segan-Radonjic (Mathematical Institute SANU)*; Milan Todorovic (Mathematical Institute SANU)
Type: Paper, paper number: 2
Building Persistent Online Open Databases in Archaeology: Bulgarian Perspective and Experience
Authors: Nikola Theodossiev (Sofia University St. Kliment Ohridski)*
Type: Poster, paper number: 65
The state of digital archaeological archiving policies and practice in Europe – a data-based analysis and what to take out of it
Authors: David Novák (Institute of Archaeology of the CAS, Prague)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 92
Learning from the others: Inrap in the context of European cooperation initiatives in the field of digital archaeological data
Authors: Kai Salas Rossenbach (Inrap)*; Amala Marx (Institut national de recherches archéologiques préventives)
Type: Paper, paper number: 93
“But I’m not sure if that’s of any interest”. Researchers’ points of view on archaeological fieldwork data sharing in Catalonia
Authors: Sabina Batlle Baró (Universitat de Barcelona)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 107
Dissemination and sustainable storage of Norwegian archaeological data
Authors: Espen Uleberg (NO)*; Mieko Matsumoto (NO)
Type: Paper, paper number: 236
ARIADNEplus Visual Media Service 3D configurator: toward full guided publication of high-resolution 3D data
Authors: Marco Potenziani (ISTI – CNR)*; Federico Ponchio (CNR-ISTI); Marco Callieri (CNR-ISTI); Paolo Cignoni (CNR Pisa)
Type: Paper, paper number: 354
S43. Synergies in 3D Spatial Analysis
Theorizing Time and Change for 3D GIS
Authors: Elaine A Sullivan (University of California, Santa Cruz)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 20
All datasets are Meshes: Towards a new Ontology for 3D GIS
Authors: Paul Harwood (Runette Software Ltd)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 33
Topology-based Scar Detection on Paleolithic Artifacts in 3D
Authors: Jan Philipp Bullenkamp (Martin-Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, Institute of Computer Science)*; Florian Linsel (Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, Institute of Computer Science); Hubert Mara (MLU – Instiut für Informatik)
Type: Paper, paper number: 54
Grouping artefacts from archaeological deposits: 3D GIS and the interpretation of site formation
Authors: Joshua Emmitt (University of Auckland)*; Matthew Barrett (University of Auckland); Sina Masoud-Ansari (University of Auckland); Rebecca Phillipps (University of Auckland); Simon Holdaway (University of Auckland)
Type: Paper, paper number: 88
Re-visualising Glazed Bricks of Ashur: From a puzzle to a 3D model
Authors: Anja Fügert (German Archaeological Insitute); Sebastian Hageneuer (University of Cologne)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 99
3D visual analysis
Authors: Marcos Llobera (DigAR Lab, University of Washington)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 102
From shape to grow conditions: a workflow combining micro-3D scanning, geometric morphometrics and machine learning for the analysis of past agricultural strategies.
Authors: Hector A. Orengo (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology)*; Alexandra Livarda (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology); Alexandra Kriti (Landscape Archaeology Research Group, Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology); Ioannis Mylonas (Institute of Plant Breeding & Genetic Resources); Elissabet Ninou (Department of Agriculture, International Hellenic University )
Type: Paper, paper number: 137
Space Cubed: exploring the curious world of voxels
Authors: Gary R Nobles (Oxford Archaeology)*; Christopher Roosevelt (ANAMED, Koç University); Catherine Scott (ANAMED, Koç University)
Type: Paper, paper number: 145
Synergies in 3D Spatial Analysis: Discussion
Authors: Gary R Nobles (Oxford Archaeology)*; Alexander Jansen (University of Durham); Markos Katsianis (University of Patras); Kelly McClinton (University of Oxford); James Taylor (Department of Archaeology, University of York)
Type: Paper, paper number: 146
Best of both worlds: Visibility analysis of objects of different sizes based on algorithms and experimental studies
Authors: Kamil Kopij (Jagiellonian University, Institute of Archaeology)*; Kaja Głomb (Jagiellonian University, Institute of Applied Studies)
Type: Paper, paper number: 271
The Art of Dimensional Space – starlight, star bright
Authors: Gail Higginbottom (Incipit CSIC, Santiago de Compostela)*; Vincent Mom (DPP)
Type: Paper, paper number: 282
Digital surface models of crops used in archaeological feature detection -case study at the site of Tomašanci-Dubarava in Eastern Croatia
Authors: Rajna Sosic Klindzic (University of Zagreb Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences)*; Miroslav Vuković (University of Zagreb); Hrvoje Kalafatic (Institute of Archaeology Zagreb); Bartul Siljeg (Institute of Archaeology Zagreb)
Type: Paper, paper number: 314
Photogrammetric documentation in 3D analysis of an Early Medieval burial mound in Kazimierzów, Poland.
Authors: Jakub Stępnik (Jagiellonian University, Institute of Archaeology)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 352
Building and using an integrated 3D database
Authors: Rosie Campbell (University of Cambridge); Michael Boyd (The Cyprus Institute); James Herbst (The American School of Classical Studies in Athens); Hallvard R Indgjerd (Museum of Cultural History, University of Oslo)*; Nathan Meyer (University of California, Berkeley)
Type: Paper, paper number: 377
S44. Roads to Complexity: Technological and Quantitative Approaches to Human and Objects Connectivity
Mobility and the reuse of Roman Roads for the deposition of Viking Age silver hoards in northwest England
Authors: Wyatt Wilcox (University of Oxford)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 40
Algorithms and Exponential Random Graph Models – How to make the most of incomplete archaeological data
Authors: Deborah Priß (Durham University )*; John Wainwright (Durham University); Dan Lawrence (Durham University); Laura Turnbull-Lloyd (Durham University); Christina Prell (Faculty of Spatial Sciences, University of Groningen); Christodoulos Karittevlis (AAISCS); Andreas Ioannides (AAISCS)
Type: Paper, paper number: 63
Digital paths of an artificial society. Modeling connectivity in the northern Terramare landscape
Authors: Laura Burigana (University of Padua)*
Type: Paper, paper number: 156
Streets and Neighbourhoods: A case study from modern day İstanbul
Authors: Tuna Kalaycı (Leiden University, Faculty of Archaeology)*; Scott Branting (COS); Dominique Langis-Barsetti (University of Toronto); Jessica Robkin (UCF)
Type: Paper, paper number: 177
Roads and rivers. The importance of regional transportation networks for early urbanization in central Italy (1000-500 BC).
Authors: Luce Prignano (University of Barcellona)*; Francesca Fulminante (Bristol University); Emanuele Cozzo (University of Barcelona); Pablo Candelas (University of Barcelona)
Type: Paper, paper number: 367
Find Stories: Bioanthropology and Material Culture Synergies to evaluate the impact of short term mobilities
Authors: Konstantinos P Trimmis (University of Bristol)*; Christianne L Fernee (University of Bristol)
Type: Paper, paper number: 372