Review of Beyond Illustration: 2D and 3D Digital Tools for Discovery in Archaeology [Book]

The creation of images has been an activity since the beginning of human society: our early ancestors painted or carved rocks with depictions of their lifestyles and beliefs. Rocks are not very portable, however, and humans like to share their visualisations and the knowledge contained within them....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Melissa Terras
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of York 2010-06-01
Series:Internet Archaeology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue28/terras.html
id doaj-a8a59c6527524826a1f19ea547addc99
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a8a59c6527524826a1f19ea547addc992020-11-24T23:27:57ZengUniversity of YorkInternet Archaeology1363-53872010-06-012810.11141/ia.28.6 Review of Beyond Illustration: 2D and 3D Digital Tools for Discovery in Archaeology [Book]Melissa Terras 0University College LondonThe creation of images has been an activity since the beginning of human society: our early ancestors painted or carved rocks with depictions of their lifestyles and beliefs. Rocks are not very portable, however, and humans like to share their visualisations and the knowledge contained within them. Much investment in technology has focused on the ability to create, replicate and disseminate visual information, from early print materials to attempts at chemical photography and recently, the development of ever more complex computational methods to represent visual information in a variety of ways. Visualisations are an important means of communication, a source of information and a focus of both social interaction and scholarly activity. Images and visualisations play an important role in cultural and social history, can contain valuable historical information and are used more and more in academic research that aims to study culture in its widest sense: focussing on artefacts and cultural produce.http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue28/terras.htmlarchaeologyreviewBeyond Illustration: 2D and 3D Digital Tools for Discovery in Archaeologyimagesvisualisation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Melissa Terras
spellingShingle Melissa Terras
Review of Beyond Illustration: 2D and 3D Digital Tools for Discovery in Archaeology [Book]
Internet Archaeology
archaeology
review
Beyond Illustration: 2D and 3D Digital Tools for Discovery in Archaeology
images
visualisation
author_facet Melissa Terras
author_sort Melissa Terras
title Review of Beyond Illustration: 2D and 3D Digital Tools for Discovery in Archaeology [Book]
title_short Review of Beyond Illustration: 2D and 3D Digital Tools for Discovery in Archaeology [Book]
title_full Review of Beyond Illustration: 2D and 3D Digital Tools for Discovery in Archaeology [Book]
title_fullStr Review of Beyond Illustration: 2D and 3D Digital Tools for Discovery in Archaeology [Book]
title_full_unstemmed Review of Beyond Illustration: 2D and 3D Digital Tools for Discovery in Archaeology [Book]
title_sort review of beyond illustration: 2d and 3d digital tools for discovery in archaeology [book]
publisher University of York
series Internet Archaeology
issn 1363-5387
publishDate 2010-06-01
description The creation of images has been an activity since the beginning of human society: our early ancestors painted or carved rocks with depictions of their lifestyles and beliefs. Rocks are not very portable, however, and humans like to share their visualisations and the knowledge contained within them. Much investment in technology has focused on the ability to create, replicate and disseminate visual information, from early print materials to attempts at chemical photography and recently, the development of ever more complex computational methods to represent visual information in a variety of ways. Visualisations are an important means of communication, a source of information and a focus of both social interaction and scholarly activity. Images and visualisations play an important role in cultural and social history, can contain valuable historical information and are used more and more in academic research that aims to study culture in its widest sense: focussing on artefacts and cultural produce.
topic archaeology
review
Beyond Illustration: 2D and 3D Digital Tools for Discovery in Archaeology
images
visualisation
url http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue28/terras.html
work_keys_str_mv AT melissaterras reviewofbeyondillustration2dand3ddigitaltoolsfordiscoveryinarchaeologybook
_version_ 1725551144295464960