ARIADNE: Advanced Research Infrastructures for Archaeological Dataset Networking in Europe. Niccolucci, F. & Richards, J., D. International Journal of Humanities & Arts Computing, 7(1/2):70-88, 2013.
ARIADNE: Advanced Research Infrastructures for Archaeological Dataset Networking in Europe. [link]Website  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Archaeologists regularly deal with large and diverse data sets, which are frequently the only record of excavated and destroyed archaeological sites. They need digital research infrastructures to preserve and provide access to this fragile digital data and to develop tools to manipulate and analyse it. Digital data is also increasing in quantity and size, and is often born digital, but there is a high degree of fragmentation and difficulty of accessing data in an integrated way. There is a small but growing number of national discipline-specific research infrastructures, and there have been a few project based attempts to provide European exemplars. This paper describes ARIADNE, a new research infrastructure for archaeologists, funded by the European Commission. It discusses some of the major issues and challenges and introduces some of the activities that ARIADNE partners will undertake. Given the transnational nature of many archaeological research questions, there is a clear value-added for organising research infrastructures in archaeology at a European level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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 title = {ARIADNE: Advanced Research Infrastructures for Archaeological Dataset Networking in Europe.},
 type = {article},
 year = {2013},
 keywords = {ARCHAEOLOGICAL archives,ARCHAEOLOGICAL museums & collections,ARCHAEOLOGY research,DIGITIZATION of archival materials,EUROPE,EUROPEAN Commission,EXCAVATIONS (Archaeology),RESEARCH,RESEARCH & development projects,RESEARCH -- Methodology,archaeology,integrating data,large datasets},
 pages = {70-88},
 volume = {7},
 websites = {10.3366/ijhac.2013.0082\nhttp://ezproxy.leedsmet.ac.uk/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=a9h&AN=91734912&site=eds-live&scope=site},
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 abstract = {Archaeologists regularly deal with large and diverse data sets, which are frequently the only record of excavated and destroyed archaeological sites. They need digital research infrastructures to preserve and provide access to this fragile digital data and to develop tools to manipulate and analyse it. Digital data is also increasing in quantity and size, and is often born digital, but there is a high degree of fragmentation and difficulty of accessing data in an integrated way. There is a small but growing number of national discipline-specific research infrastructures, and there have been a few project based attempts to provide European exemplars. This paper describes ARIADNE, a new research infrastructure for archaeologists, funded by the European Commission. It discusses some of the major issues and challenges and introduces some of the activities that ARIADNE partners will undertake. Given the transnational nature of many archaeological research questions, there is a clear value-added for organising research infrastructures in archaeology at a European level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]},
 bibtype = {article},
 author = {Niccolucci, Franco and Richards, Julian D},
 doi = {10.3366/ijhac.2013.0082},
 journal = {International Journal of Humanities & Arts Computing},
 number = {1/2}
}

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