Bridging Digital Approaches and Legacy in Archaeology
A special issue of Digital (ISSN 2673-6470).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (20 April 2022) | Viewed by 30686
Special Issue Editors
Interests: digital cultural heritage; digital archaeological practice; GIS applications in archaeology; 3D spatial modelling; digital data management, preservation and re-use
Interests: computational archaeology; landscape archaeology; remote sensing; quantitative methods
Interests: geophysics and remote sensing; digital heritage; spatial analysis and GIS; landscape archaeology; spatial history; digital humanities; Cultural Resources Management (CRM)
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Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The advent of the ubiquitous digital ecosystem has provided fresh impetus to research in archaeology and the cultural heritage domain. Digital practice has changed the way we do archaeology and opened new paths for imagining the past. Digitalization, however, is informed by the available technology and ever-changing socioeconomic circumstances. Such circumstances fill the ecosystem with drawbacks, promises, and possibilities. At the same time, archaeological research and knowledge generation are also historically situated events. “Digital archaeology” has embraced both sides of the spectrum and created novel challenges. One of these challenges concerns legacy data.
The speed of change in digitalization is creating relic data, antiquated machinery, and obsolete workflows in proportions that are expanding every year. Datasets, data collections, documentation materials, and research outputs have been created using different technological solutions that encompass variable levels of traditional and digital methods and equipment. The constraints in analogue recording, the numerical grounding of early computing, and the limitations in early and more recent hardware and software have resulted in datasets that may or may not be able to be used by the digital methods of today and tomorrow, broadly known as the legacy issue.
These “digital legacies” have been piling up faster than they are being integrated, affecting our ability to reflect on the sustainability of our digital products and re-use potential. Therefore, it is our natural duty to question: to what extent can new forms of data processing maintain, utilize, or even enhance existing datasets and open new paths to creative digital representations and interpretations of the past? Are there any ways to escape the rigidness of legacy or at least transform legacy to work in the current fourth paradigm of data-intensive scientific discovery?
This Special Issue is requesting contributions that describe success stories or failures when dealing with already compiled research datasets and documentation materials in both analogue and digital formats. We also hope to receive contributions related to legacy machinery and peripherals (e.g., serial ports, magnetic storage devices, SCSI connectors) and their impact on archaeological research. We encourage the submission of practical and theoretical works that critically examine legacy issues and provide pathways to alternative understandings of the digital issues in archaeology and cultural heritage. For all manuscripts submitted to this Special Issue, the Article Processing Charges (APC, 1000 CHF) will be fully waived if the paper is accepted after peer review.
Contributions are invited on topics including but not restricted to the following:
- Tackling data absence and uncertainty in traditional research archives
- Computational approaches to harvesting analogue or digitized data
- The prospect and limits in AI legacy data processing
- From analogue to digital data: establishing provenance
- Remote sensing legacies and new opportunities
- Retrospective photogrammetry
- 3D spatial data augmentation
- Data re-use in video gaming
- Obsolete machinery and discontinued peripherals; equipment as material culture.
- Political legacies in and of digital technology
- Economics of legacies—(long term) costs of maintaining digital legacies and sustainability
- Missed/disrupted digital legacies in the form of workflows, technologies, data, personal experiences, and know-how
Dr. Markos Katsianis
Dr. Tuna Kalayci
Prof. Dr. Apostolos Sarris
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Submitted manuscripts should not have been published previously, nor be under consideration for publication elsewhere (except conference proceedings papers). All manuscripts are thoroughly refereed through a single-blind peer-review process. A guide for authors and other relevant information for submission of manuscripts is available on the Instructions for Authors page. Digital is an international peer-reviewed open access quarterly journal published by MDPI.
Please visit the Instructions for Authors page before submitting a manuscript. The Article Processing Charge (APC) for publication in this open access journal is 1000 CHF (Swiss Francs). Submitted papers should be well formatted and use good English. Authors may use MDPI's English editing service prior to publication or during author revisions.
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