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dc.contributor.authorAshley, Michaelen_US
dc.contributor.authorTringham, Ruthen_US
dc.contributor.authorPerlingieri, Cinziaen_US
dc.contributor.editorKurt Debattista and Cinzia Perlingieri and Denis Pitzalis and Sandro Spinaen_US
dc.date.accessioned2014-01-31T15:27:44Z
dc.date.available2014-01-31T15:27:44Z
dc.date.issued2009en_US
dc.identifier.isbn978-3-905674-18-7en_US
dc.identifier.issn1811-864Xen_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://dx.doi.org/10.2312/VAST/VAST09/109-116en_US
dc.description.abstractThe idea of embedding, interweaving, entangling and otherwise linking the data and media from archaeological excavations with their interpretation and meaningful presentation in an open access sharable platform has long been an ambition of those of us working in the digital documentation of archaeological research and the public presentation of cultural heritage. Formidable barriers still exist to making it possible for projects to achieve these aims, ranging from intellectual property concerns to providing commitments to the long-term sustainability of the digital content. Working in collaboration with the contributors, archaeological project managers, publishers and information technologists, we devised a content licensing agreement that makes it possible for the primary research media and data, combined with the monograph texts, to be freely and openly accessible in perpetuity. The aim of our project, Last House on the Hill (LHotH), is to holistically reconstitute the rich multimedia and primary research data with the impressive texts of the monograph, the printed final report of the Berkeley Archaeologists at Çatalhöyük (BACH) project, in which a team from UC Berkeley excavated a group of Neolithic 9000-year old buildings at this famous cultural heritage location in Central Anatolia, Turkey. The Last House on the Hill brings together the published text, complete project database (including all media formats such as photographs, videos, maps, line drawings), related websites, data and media outside the direct domain of the BACH project, and recontextualised presentations of the data as remixes, movies, and other interpretive works by BACH team members and many others. We are achieving this through an event-centered, CIDOC-CRM compatible implementation ontology, expressed with the open source Omeka web-publishing platform, providing open access, transparency and open-endedness to what is normally the closed and final process of monograph publication. This paper describes the strategy, goals, architecture and implementation for the project, emphasizing the novel and innovative approaches that were required to make the project successful.en_US
dc.publisherThe Eurographics Associationen_US
dc.subjectCategories and Subject Descriptors: Publishing, metadata, semantics, long-term preservation and access.en_US
dc.titleLast House on the Hill: Digitally Remediating Data and Media for Preservation and Accessen_US
dc.description.seriesinformationVAST: International Symposium on Virtual Reality, Archaeology and Intelligent Cultural Heritageen_US


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