Andrew S Wilson | University of Bradford (original) (raw)

Papers by Andrew S Wilson

Research paper thumbnail of Curious Travellers: Using Web-Scraped and Crowd-Sourced Imagery in Support of Heritage Under Threat

Springer eBooks, 2022

Designed as a pragmatic approach that anticipates change to cultural heritage, this chapter discu... more Designed as a pragmatic approach that anticipates change to cultural heritage, this chapter discusses responses that encompass records for tangible cultural heritage (monuments, sites and landscapes) and the narratives that see the impact upon them. The Curious Travellers project provides a mechanism for digitally documenting heritage sites that have been destroyed or are under immediate threat from unsympathetic development, neglect, natural disasters, conflict and cultural vandalism. The project created and tested data-mining and crowd-sourced workflows that enable the accurate digital documentation and 3D visualisation of buildings, archaeological sites, monuments and heritage at risk. When combined with donated content, image data are used to recreate 3D models of endangered and lost monuments and heritage sites using a combination of open-source and proprietary methods. These models are queried against contextual information, helping to place and interrogate structures with relevant site and landscape data for the surrounding environment. Geospatial records such as aerial imagery and 3D mobile mapping laser scan data serve as a framework for adding new content and testing accuracy. In preserving time-event records, image metadata offers important information on visitor habits and conservation pressures, which can be used to inform measures for site management.

Research paper thumbnail of Curious Travellers: Using Web-Scraped and Crowd-Sourced Imagery in Support of Heritage Under Threat

Book Chapter, 2022

Designed as a pragmatic approach that anticipates change to cultural heritage, this chapter discu... more Designed as a pragmatic approach that anticipates change to cultural heritage, this chapter discusses responses that encompass records for tangible cultural heritage (monuments, sites and landscapes) and the narratives that see the impact upon them. The Curious Travellers project provides a mechanism for digitally documenting heritage sites that have been destroyed or are under immediate threat from unsympathetic development, neglect, natural disasters, conflict and cultural vandalism. The project created and tested data-mining and crowd-sourced workflows that enable the accurate digital documentation and 3D visualisation of buildings, archaeological sites, monuments and heritage at risk. When combined with donated content, image data are used to recreate 3D models of endangered and lost monuments and heritage sites using a combination of open-source and proprietary methods. These models are queried against contextual information, helping to place and interrogate structures with relevant site and landscape data for the surrounding environment. Geospatial records such as aerial imagery and 3D mobile mapping laser scan data serve as a framework for adding new content and testing accuracy. In preserving time-event records, image metadata offers important information on visitor habits and conservation pressures, which can be used to inform measures for site management.

Research paper thumbnail of A matter of months: High precision migration chronology of a Bronze Age female

PloS one, 2017

Establishing the age at which prehistoric individuals move away from their childhood residential ... more Establishing the age at which prehistoric individuals move away from their childhood residential location holds crucial information about the socio dynamics and mobility patterns in ancient societies. We present a novel combination of strontium isotope analyses performed on the over 3000 year old "Skrydstrup Woman" from Denmark, for whom we compiled a highly detailed month-scale model of her migration timeline. When combined with physical anthropological analyses this timeline can be related to the chronological age at which the residential location changed. We conducted a series of high-resolution strontium isotope analyses of hard and soft human tissues and combined these with anthropological investigations including CT-scanning and 3D visualizations. The Skrydstrup Woman lived during a pan-European period characterized by technical innovation and great social transformations stimulated by long-distance connections; consequently she represents an important part of both D...

Research paper thumbnail of BradPhys to BradViz or from archaeological science to heritage science

2016 22nd International Conference on Virtual System & Multimedia (VSMM), 2016

Research paper thumbnail of Analyzing and Interpreting Lime Burials from the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939): A Case Study from La Carcavilla Cemetery

Journal of forensic sciences, 2016

Over 500 victims of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) were buried in the cemetery of La Carcavill... more Over 500 victims of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) were buried in the cemetery of La Carcavilla (Palencia, Spain). White material, observed in several burials, was analyzed with Raman spectroscopy and powder XRD, and confirmed to be lime. Archaeological findings at La Carcavilla's cemetery show that the application of lime was used in an organized way, mostly associated with coffinless interments of victims of Francoist repression. In burials with a lime cast, observations made it possible to draw conclusions regarding the presence of soft tissue at the moment of deposition, the sequence of events, and the presence of clothing and other evidence. This study illustrates the importance of analyzing a burial within the depositional environment and taphonomic context.

Research paper thumbnail of Technological Analysis of the World's Earliest Shamanic Costume: A Multi-Scalar, Experimental Study of a Red Deer Headdress from the Early Holocene Site of Star Carr, North Yorkshire, UK

PloS one, 2016

Shamanic belief systems represent the first form of religious practice visible within the global ... more Shamanic belief systems represent the first form of religious practice visible within the global archaeological record. Here we report on the earliest known evidence of shamanic costume: modified red deer crania headdresses from the Early Holocene site of Star Carr (c. 11 kya). More than 90% of the examples from prehistoric Europe come from this one site, establishing it as a place of outstanding shamanistic/cosmological significance. Our work, involving a programme of experimental replication, analysis of macroscopic traces, organic residue analysis and 3D image acquisition, metrology and visualisation, represents the first attempt to understand the manufacturing processes used to create these artefacts. The results produced were unexpected-rather than being carefully crafted objects, elements of their production can only be described as expedient.

Research paper thumbnail of Interpreting lime burials. A discussion in light of lime burials at St. Rombout's cemetery in Mechelen, Belgium (10th–18th centuries)

Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 2015

ABSTRACT

Research paper thumbnail of Raman spectroscopy as a non-destructive screening technique for studying white substances from archaeological and forensic burial contexts

Journal of Raman Spectroscopy, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Tracing the dynamic life story of a Bronze Age Female

Research paper thumbnail of The development of a histological index for assessing the condition of hair from archaeological or forensic contexts, J

Research paper thumbnail of Surface Curvature of Pelvic Joints from Three Laser Scanners: Separating Anatomy from Measurement Error

Journal of Forensic Sciences, 2015

Research paper thumbnail of Towards an Understanding of the Interaction of Hair with the Depositional Environment

Research paper thumbnail of Gristhorpe Man: an Early Bronze Age log-coffin burial scientifically defined

Antiquity, 2010

A log-coffin excavated in the early nineteenth century proved to be well enough preserved in the ... more A log-coffin excavated in the early nineteenth century proved to be well enough preserved in the early twenty-first century for the full armoury of modern scientific investigation to give its occupants and contents new identity, new origins and a new date. In many ways the interpretation is much the same as before: a local big man buried looking out to sea. Modern analytical techniques can create a person more real, more human and more securely anchored in history. This research team shows how.

Research paper thumbnail of Archaeological, radiological, and biological evidence offer insight into Inca child sacrifice

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013

Examination of three frozen bodies, a 13-y-old girl and a girl and boy aged 4 to 5 y, separately ... more Examination of three frozen bodies, a 13-y-old girl and a girl and boy aged 4 to 5 y, separately entombed near the Andean summit of Volcán Llullaillaco, Argentina, sheds new light on human sacrifice as a central part of the Imperial Inca capacocha rite, described by chroniclers writing after the Spanish conquest. The high-resolution diachronic data presented here, obtained directly from scalp hair, implies escalating coca and alcohol ingestion in the lead-up to death. These data, combined with archaeological and radiological evidence, deepen our understanding of the circumstances and context of final placement on the mountain top. We argue that the individuals were treated differently according to their age, status, and ritual role. Finally, we relate our findings to questions of consent, coercion, and/or compliance, and the controversial issues of ideological justification and strategies of social control and political legitimation pursued by the expansionist Inca state before Euro...

Research paper thumbnail of Ancient human genome sequence of an extinct Palaeo-Eskimo

Research paper thumbnail of Bone Marrow and Bone as a Source for Postmortem RNA*

Journal of Forensic Sciences, 2011

Research paper thumbnail of Probable human hair found in a fossil hyaena coprolite from Gladysvale cave, South Africa

Journal of Archaeological Science, 2009

Until now, the oldest known human hair was from a 9000-year-old South American mummy. Here we rep... more Until now, the oldest known human hair was from a 9000-year-old South American mummy. Here we report fossil hairs of probable human origin that exceed that age by about 200,000 years. The hairs have been discovered in a brown hyaena (Parahyaena brunnea) coprolite from Gladysvale cave in South Africa. The coprolite is part of a hyaena latrine preserved in calcified

Research paper thumbnail of Exceptional preservation of a prehistoric human brain from Heslington, Yorkshire, UK

Journal of Archaeological Science, 2011

Research paper thumbnail of Long-term effects of hydrated lime and quicklime on the decay of human remains using pig cadavers as human body analogues: Field experiments

Forensic Science International, 2014

An increased number of police enquiries involving human remains buried with lime have demonstrate... more An increased number of police enquiries involving human remains buried with lime have demonstrated the need for more research into the effect of different types of lime on cadaver decomposition and its micro-environment. This study follows previous studies by the authors who have investigated the effects of lime on the decay of human remains in laboratory conditions and 6 months of field experiments. Six pig carcasses (Sus scrofa), used as human body analogues, were buried without lime with hydrated lime (Ca(OH)2) and quicklime (CaO) in shallow graves in sandy-loam soil in Belgium and recovered after 17 and 42 months of burial. Analysis of the soil, lime and carcasses included entomology, pH, moisture content, microbial activity, histology and lime carbonation. The results of this study demonstrate that despite conflicting evidence in the literature, the extent of decomposition is slowed down by burial with both hydrated lime and quicklime. The more advanced the decay process, the more similar the degree of liquefaction between the limed and unlimed remains. The end result for each mode of burial will ultimately result in skeletonisation. This study has implications for the investigation of clandestine burials, for a better understanding of archaeological plaster burials and potentially for the interpretation of mass graves and management of mass disasters by humanitarian organisation and DVI teams.

Research paper thumbnail of Short-term effects of hydrated lime and quicklime on the decay of human remains using pig cadavers as human body analogues: Laboratory experiments

Forensic Science International, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Curious Travellers: Using Web-Scraped and Crowd-Sourced Imagery in Support of Heritage Under Threat

Springer eBooks, 2022

Designed as a pragmatic approach that anticipates change to cultural heritage, this chapter discu... more Designed as a pragmatic approach that anticipates change to cultural heritage, this chapter discusses responses that encompass records for tangible cultural heritage (monuments, sites and landscapes) and the narratives that see the impact upon them. The Curious Travellers project provides a mechanism for digitally documenting heritage sites that have been destroyed or are under immediate threat from unsympathetic development, neglect, natural disasters, conflict and cultural vandalism. The project created and tested data-mining and crowd-sourced workflows that enable the accurate digital documentation and 3D visualisation of buildings, archaeological sites, monuments and heritage at risk. When combined with donated content, image data are used to recreate 3D models of endangered and lost monuments and heritage sites using a combination of open-source and proprietary methods. These models are queried against contextual information, helping to place and interrogate structures with relevant site and landscape data for the surrounding environment. Geospatial records such as aerial imagery and 3D mobile mapping laser scan data serve as a framework for adding new content and testing accuracy. In preserving time-event records, image metadata offers important information on visitor habits and conservation pressures, which can be used to inform measures for site management.

Research paper thumbnail of Curious Travellers: Using Web-Scraped and Crowd-Sourced Imagery in Support of Heritage Under Threat

Book Chapter, 2022

Designed as a pragmatic approach that anticipates change to cultural heritage, this chapter discu... more Designed as a pragmatic approach that anticipates change to cultural heritage, this chapter discusses responses that encompass records for tangible cultural heritage (monuments, sites and landscapes) and the narratives that see the impact upon them. The Curious Travellers project provides a mechanism for digitally documenting heritage sites that have been destroyed or are under immediate threat from unsympathetic development, neglect, natural disasters, conflict and cultural vandalism. The project created and tested data-mining and crowd-sourced workflows that enable the accurate digital documentation and 3D visualisation of buildings, archaeological sites, monuments and heritage at risk. When combined with donated content, image data are used to recreate 3D models of endangered and lost monuments and heritage sites using a combination of open-source and proprietary methods. These models are queried against contextual information, helping to place and interrogate structures with relevant site and landscape data for the surrounding environment. Geospatial records such as aerial imagery and 3D mobile mapping laser scan data serve as a framework for adding new content and testing accuracy. In preserving time-event records, image metadata offers important information on visitor habits and conservation pressures, which can be used to inform measures for site management.

Research paper thumbnail of A matter of months: High precision migration chronology of a Bronze Age female

PloS one, 2017

Establishing the age at which prehistoric individuals move away from their childhood residential ... more Establishing the age at which prehistoric individuals move away from their childhood residential location holds crucial information about the socio dynamics and mobility patterns in ancient societies. We present a novel combination of strontium isotope analyses performed on the over 3000 year old "Skrydstrup Woman" from Denmark, for whom we compiled a highly detailed month-scale model of her migration timeline. When combined with physical anthropological analyses this timeline can be related to the chronological age at which the residential location changed. We conducted a series of high-resolution strontium isotope analyses of hard and soft human tissues and combined these with anthropological investigations including CT-scanning and 3D visualizations. The Skrydstrup Woman lived during a pan-European period characterized by technical innovation and great social transformations stimulated by long-distance connections; consequently she represents an important part of both D...

Research paper thumbnail of BradPhys to BradViz or from archaeological science to heritage science

2016 22nd International Conference on Virtual System & Multimedia (VSMM), 2016

Research paper thumbnail of Analyzing and Interpreting Lime Burials from the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939): A Case Study from La Carcavilla Cemetery

Journal of forensic sciences, 2016

Over 500 victims of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) were buried in the cemetery of La Carcavill... more Over 500 victims of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) were buried in the cemetery of La Carcavilla (Palencia, Spain). White material, observed in several burials, was analyzed with Raman spectroscopy and powder XRD, and confirmed to be lime. Archaeological findings at La Carcavilla's cemetery show that the application of lime was used in an organized way, mostly associated with coffinless interments of victims of Francoist repression. In burials with a lime cast, observations made it possible to draw conclusions regarding the presence of soft tissue at the moment of deposition, the sequence of events, and the presence of clothing and other evidence. This study illustrates the importance of analyzing a burial within the depositional environment and taphonomic context.

Research paper thumbnail of Technological Analysis of the World's Earliest Shamanic Costume: A Multi-Scalar, Experimental Study of a Red Deer Headdress from the Early Holocene Site of Star Carr, North Yorkshire, UK

PloS one, 2016

Shamanic belief systems represent the first form of religious practice visible within the global ... more Shamanic belief systems represent the first form of religious practice visible within the global archaeological record. Here we report on the earliest known evidence of shamanic costume: modified red deer crania headdresses from the Early Holocene site of Star Carr (c. 11 kya). More than 90% of the examples from prehistoric Europe come from this one site, establishing it as a place of outstanding shamanistic/cosmological significance. Our work, involving a programme of experimental replication, analysis of macroscopic traces, organic residue analysis and 3D image acquisition, metrology and visualisation, represents the first attempt to understand the manufacturing processes used to create these artefacts. The results produced were unexpected-rather than being carefully crafted objects, elements of their production can only be described as expedient.

Research paper thumbnail of Interpreting lime burials. A discussion in light of lime burials at St. Rombout's cemetery in Mechelen, Belgium (10th–18th centuries)

Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 2015

ABSTRACT

Research paper thumbnail of Raman spectroscopy as a non-destructive screening technique for studying white substances from archaeological and forensic burial contexts

Journal of Raman Spectroscopy, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Tracing the dynamic life story of a Bronze Age Female

Research paper thumbnail of The development of a histological index for assessing the condition of hair from archaeological or forensic contexts, J

Research paper thumbnail of Surface Curvature of Pelvic Joints from Three Laser Scanners: Separating Anatomy from Measurement Error

Journal of Forensic Sciences, 2015

Research paper thumbnail of Towards an Understanding of the Interaction of Hair with the Depositional Environment

Research paper thumbnail of Gristhorpe Man: an Early Bronze Age log-coffin burial scientifically defined

Antiquity, 2010

A log-coffin excavated in the early nineteenth century proved to be well enough preserved in the ... more A log-coffin excavated in the early nineteenth century proved to be well enough preserved in the early twenty-first century for the full armoury of modern scientific investigation to give its occupants and contents new identity, new origins and a new date. In many ways the interpretation is much the same as before: a local big man buried looking out to sea. Modern analytical techniques can create a person more real, more human and more securely anchored in history. This research team shows how.

Research paper thumbnail of Archaeological, radiological, and biological evidence offer insight into Inca child sacrifice

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013

Examination of three frozen bodies, a 13-y-old girl and a girl and boy aged 4 to 5 y, separately ... more Examination of three frozen bodies, a 13-y-old girl and a girl and boy aged 4 to 5 y, separately entombed near the Andean summit of Volcán Llullaillaco, Argentina, sheds new light on human sacrifice as a central part of the Imperial Inca capacocha rite, described by chroniclers writing after the Spanish conquest. The high-resolution diachronic data presented here, obtained directly from scalp hair, implies escalating coca and alcohol ingestion in the lead-up to death. These data, combined with archaeological and radiological evidence, deepen our understanding of the circumstances and context of final placement on the mountain top. We argue that the individuals were treated differently according to their age, status, and ritual role. Finally, we relate our findings to questions of consent, coercion, and/or compliance, and the controversial issues of ideological justification and strategies of social control and political legitimation pursued by the expansionist Inca state before Euro...

Research paper thumbnail of Ancient human genome sequence of an extinct Palaeo-Eskimo

Research paper thumbnail of Bone Marrow and Bone as a Source for Postmortem RNA*

Journal of Forensic Sciences, 2011

Research paper thumbnail of Probable human hair found in a fossil hyaena coprolite from Gladysvale cave, South Africa

Journal of Archaeological Science, 2009

Until now, the oldest known human hair was from a 9000-year-old South American mummy. Here we rep... more Until now, the oldest known human hair was from a 9000-year-old South American mummy. Here we report fossil hairs of probable human origin that exceed that age by about 200,000 years. The hairs have been discovered in a brown hyaena (Parahyaena brunnea) coprolite from Gladysvale cave in South Africa. The coprolite is part of a hyaena latrine preserved in calcified

Research paper thumbnail of Exceptional preservation of a prehistoric human brain from Heslington, Yorkshire, UK

Journal of Archaeological Science, 2011

Research paper thumbnail of Long-term effects of hydrated lime and quicklime on the decay of human remains using pig cadavers as human body analogues: Field experiments

Forensic Science International, 2014

An increased number of police enquiries involving human remains buried with lime have demonstrate... more An increased number of police enquiries involving human remains buried with lime have demonstrated the need for more research into the effect of different types of lime on cadaver decomposition and its micro-environment. This study follows previous studies by the authors who have investigated the effects of lime on the decay of human remains in laboratory conditions and 6 months of field experiments. Six pig carcasses (Sus scrofa), used as human body analogues, were buried without lime with hydrated lime (Ca(OH)2) and quicklime (CaO) in shallow graves in sandy-loam soil in Belgium and recovered after 17 and 42 months of burial. Analysis of the soil, lime and carcasses included entomology, pH, moisture content, microbial activity, histology and lime carbonation. The results of this study demonstrate that despite conflicting evidence in the literature, the extent of decomposition is slowed down by burial with both hydrated lime and quicklime. The more advanced the decay process, the more similar the degree of liquefaction between the limed and unlimed remains. The end result for each mode of burial will ultimately result in skeletonisation. This study has implications for the investigation of clandestine burials, for a better understanding of archaeological plaster burials and potentially for the interpretation of mass graves and management of mass disasters by humanitarian organisation and DVI teams.

Research paper thumbnail of Short-term effects of hydrated lime and quicklime on the decay of human remains using pig cadavers as human body analogues: Laboratory experiments

Forensic Science International, 2014