Reconcilable differences: Using retrospective photogrammetry to bridge the divide between analogue and digital site data collected during long-term excavation projects
Unhammer, Ole Fredrik; Haaland, Magnus Mathisen; Armitage, Simon James; Henshilwood, Christopher Stuart; Niekerk, Karen Loise van
Peer reviewed, Journal article
Published version
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https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3174022Utgivelsesdato
2024Metadata
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Originalversjon
10.1371/journal.pone.0310741Sammendrag
Over the last 30 years, high-resolution site documentation has rapidly developed, with ana logue drawings and film photography being replaced with high-precision digital recordings.
Today, most archaeological field data sets are produced using digital tools that store spatial
and visual information in various digital formats directly, i.e., born-digital. A fully digital work flow makes the process of combining, comparing, and integrating field datasets quicker,
easier, and potentially more analytically powerful. However, at sites where both analogue
and born-digital data sets have been produced, additional procedural digitization steps are
required before full data interoperability is achieved. In cases where the archaeological sites
have a long excavation history, multiple generations of analogue and digital site documenta tion techniques have often been used, making it particularly challenging to physically recon struct an excavated site based on its archival material. The Middle Stone Age site of
Blombos Cave, South Africa, is a prime example of this type of challenging situation. This
site features a more than 3-meter-deep and well-preserved archaeological sequence dated
to between 300 and 100 000 years ago. Since it was initially excavated in 1991, multiple
archaeological campaigns have been carried out (>15), and the excavations are still ongo ing. The field documentation from Blombos Cave has, over the years, produced varied but
rich datasets that have never been integrated into a single, coherent, and accessible
archive. In this paper we evaluate the changes in excavation protocol at Blombos Cave over
time, and we use this knowledge to digitally integrate and map the various stages of excava tion within a three-dimensional framework using digital photogrammetry and archival photo graphs. The archaeological and analytical value of this approach is exemplified through
multiple case studies, in which we demonstrate how and why the merging of old and new
archaeological field data can lead to new results, specifically by offering more complete mapping and more accurate and analytically dynamic visualisations. The research history at
Blombos Cave is not unique or site-specific. Our approach would be applicable to a wide
variety of sites and contexts where long-running excavations have produced a mix of analogue and digital field data.