Article
Open Access
Digital Technologies and Communication: Prospects and Expectations
-
Francesco Gabellone
Published/Copyright:
April 14, 2015
Received: 2014-11-27
Accepted: 2014-12-30
Published Online: 2015-4-14
© 2015 Francesco Gabellone
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- Ceramics as indicators of Late Bronze Age environments at Zürich-Alpenquai (Switzerland)
- Integrated Archaeogeophysical Approach for the Study of a Medieval Monastic Settlement in Basilicata
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- Topical Issue on Challenging Digital Archaeology
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- A Manifesto for an Introspective Digital Archaeology
- Extracting Information from Archaeological Texts
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- Additive Archaeology: An Alternative Framework for Recontextualising Archaeological Entities
Keywords for this article
virtual environments;
digital restoration;
scientific transparency;
digital media;
archaeological heritage
Creative Commons
BY-NC-ND 3.0
Articles in the same Issue
- Editorial
- The Mun Valley and Central Thailand in prehistory: integrating two cultural sequences
- Mapping site-level microtopography with Real- Time Kinematic Global Navigation Satellite Systems (RTK GNSS) and Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Photogrammetry (UAVP)
- Wooden coffins in the Avar-period cemetery in Frohsdorf, Lower Austria
- Ceramics as indicators of Late Bronze Age environments at Zürich-Alpenquai (Switzerland)
- Integrated Archaeogeophysical Approach for the Study of a Medieval Monastic Settlement in Basilicata
- A New Method for Contextual Analysis on Prehistoric Attitudes to Ritual Pottery
- “Shaping” and “Painting” during the Early Bronze Age: the Case-study of Pottery of Colle della Croce (Scicli, Ragusa)
- Topical Issue on Challenging Digital Archaeology
- Challenging Digital Archaeology
- A Manifesto for an Introspective Digital Archaeology
- Extracting Information from Archaeological Texts
- Digital Technologies and Communication: Prospects and Expectations
- Beyond Digital Dwelling: Re-thinking Interpretive Visualisation in Archaeology
- Bringing Impossible Places to the Public: Three Ideas for Rupestrian Churches in Goreme, Kapadokya Utilizing a Digital Survey, 3D Printing, and Augmented Reality
- Challenging Heritage Visualisation: Beauty, Aura and Democratisation
- The Social Web and Archaeology’s Restructuring: Impact, Exploitation, Disciplinary Change
- Further Frontiers in GIS: Extending Spatial Analysis to Textual Sources in Archaeology
- Curating Archaeological Knowledge in the Digital Continuum: from Practice to Infrastructure
- Additive Archaeology: An Alternative Framework for Recontextualising Archaeological Entities