DIGITAL UNDERWATER TECHNOLOGIES IN THE METHONI BAY CULTURAL HERITAGE PROJECT, GREECE: INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACHES AND SUSTAINABILITY (original) (raw)

Submerged cultural heritage provides a unique opportunity to couple paleoenvironmental and culture-his-torical research with the contemporary cultural heritage needs of the public where field work takes place. Greece provides an ideal locale for developing what we refer to as maritime cultural heritage asset districts (MCHAD).Here we summarize two seasons (2019, 2021) of field survey work in the Methoni Bay region of Messenia off the southwestern Peloponnesus coast that provides an ideal locale for developing a MCHAD.A number of interdisciplinary survey tools were used to examine cultural and adaptive responses to environ-mental and cultural change in deep-time around the Methoni Bay with the aim of enhancing cultural heritage tourism in the area. Our project builds on earlier paleogeography and submerged heritage research by con-ducting: 1) non-invasive high definition shallow marine geophysics including Multibeam Echosounder, Side Scan Sonar, and Chirp sub-bottom profiler; 2)photogrammetry of several previously investigated shipwrecks and a unique submerged Middle Bronze Age/Middle Helladic (MH) settlement (2050/2000 –1750/1680 BCE) using a three camera custom rig mounted on a scuba scooter for large area coverage; 3) shallow submerged sediment sampling using scuba and diver operated coring device to study the deep-time environmental his-tory of the Methoni embayment and preliminary terrestrial coring using a Cobra percussion core drilling sys-tem; and 4) a cyber-archaeology workflow using photogrammetry and 3D laser desktopscanning tools to collaborate with a local museum to curate and disseminate research for the public.This article provides an overview of the project methods and preliminary results for melding scientific research with cultural heritage objectives.

Extracting the cultural heritage: new challenges for the underwater archaeologist

Underwater Technology, 2006

Analysis of archaeological sites stratified within marine sediments can open a window to cultures that are now lost between the waves. These sites and their environmental context harbour a resource that can also provide index points for sea level rise during a period of acute climate change. A decade of archaeological investigations in the western Solent by the Hampshire and Wight Trust for Maritime Archaeology, utilising divers and geophysical survey data, has led to the discovery of Mesolithic sites within submerged landscapes. They lie between 6.5m and 11.5m below British Ordnance Datum. However, the discovery of these delicate and vulnerable sites is presenting new challenges to the maritime archaeologist. The need to record, rescue and interpret the remains underwater is necessitating the development of new underwater sampling techniques.

Which way now? Maritime archaeology and underwater heritage into the 21st century

world archaeological congress, 1999

The evolution of maritime archaeology has differed widely across the globe and the perception of this field of archaeological research also varies extensively at the present time. Specific research topics need to be broached and investigated as this sub-discipline approaches the new millennium. Before this aim can be achieved, the exact nature of maritime archaeology at the end of the 20th century must be explored while its continued growth and progression in the coming century should be conjectured upon.

The Herakles project: Towards a minimum intervention methodology for the study of Underwater Cultural Heritage in harbour complex spaces

Proceeding of the 5th Asia-Pacific Regional Conference on Underwater Cultural Heritage (online), 2023

In recent years, several researchers are focusing their efforts on the development of documentation methods and techniques according to the principles of minimal and non-intrusive intervention on underwater cultural heritage (UCH), as advocated by the UNESCO 2001 Convention. These methods have been used successfully to locate and document some shipwrecks without excavation. However, few works have succeeded in investigating and extracting all available information from an underwater archaeological site with the minimum possible intervention. Within the framework of the Herakles project, we have developed a working methodology that aims to apply different non-intrusive techniques for the documentation and research of the UCH. We have developed a field workflow that has allowed us to document 35 shipwrecks in just one year, identify 151 archaeology sites and deepen our knowledge of a privileged nautical space such as the Strait of Gibraltar. We have used geophysical methods with USV survey, magnetometer, sub-bottom profiler, photogrammetry either with ROV or scientific diving, underwater GPS survey and in situ archaeological monitoring and drawing. All data have been processed in a geographic information system for management and risk analysis of this UCH. Finally, this work methodology has been useful for generating virtual resources such as 3D models or 3600 videos.

MUSAS: an innovative project for the enhancement of the Underwater Cultural Heritage

2020

Substantial effort is required to effectively monitor Italy's underwater archaeological heritage, in order to protect and conserve submerged sites, and to enhance their importance and value. ISCR is therefore driving an innovative underwater heritage project. The MUSAS project started in 2017. Its aim is to develop an integrated supraregional model to monitor and enhance underwater archaeological heritage, in museums as well as in situ, in order to develop best practices that can be extended and deployed at other sites. It has three specific objectives: 1) The creation of a web-portal for the Museo Virtuale dell’Archeologia Subacquea where annotated images and 3D models will illustrate artefacts recovered from submerged sites and now housed in museums, and the underwater sites that are the focus of the project. 2) The implementation of an advanced exploration system at the submerged archaeological sites of Baia and Egnazia. 3) The development of a network of innovative sensors t...

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