We have a talented group of employees at Direct Dimensions who regularly accomplish incredible things, not just at work but also in their personal time: publishing books, creating art, volunteering for important causes, climbing mountains, making music, and even designing a RPG.
Heritage Scanning Specialist Joe Nicoli is no exception. He recently spent time researching and co-authoring an article entitled "Exploring 3D modeling, fingerprint extraction, and other scanning applications for ancient clay oil lamps." It was published in the peer-reviewed journal, Digital Applications in Archaeology and Cultural Heritage. Congratulations Joe!
Article Abstract:
Ancient clay oil lamps provide an invaluable source of information for
archaeologists as indicators of ritual, chronology, clientele, trade,
and origin. Since the late seventeenth century, they have been drawn,
painted, and photographed for antiquarian and scientific publications.
The purpose of this paper is to explore various applications of 2D and
3D digital modeling and laser scanning of ancient clay lamps using the
Steiblicher Comet L3D Blue Scanner. It encourages widespread adoption of
this method for the creation of highly accurate archaeological
illustrations, 3D lamp typologies, 2D and 3D lamp documents, and museum
quality reproductions. Most notably, this study confirms laser scanning
as an effective method for extracting fingerprints from lamp surfaces to
make possible the identification of ancient lampmakers. Order and read the full article here.
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