< Back to list

3D scanning documentation of two different objects &#x2014; The King's Chinese Cabinet in Wilanow Palace Museum and a Roman gravestone from archeological excavations in Moesia Inferior as a part of multidisciplinary research

conferencePaper

DOI:10.1109/VSMM.2012.6365995
Authors: Bunsch Eryk / Guzowska Anna / Sitnik Robert

Extracted Abstract:

β€” In the presented article two examples of use of high resolut ion 3D scanning for documentation o f cultural heritage objects will be shown. Comparison of two entirely different objects, made of different materials (polychromatic wood and porous limestone) shows versatility of this scanning technology, which will revolutionize heritage documentation. Important aspect is the complexity of specially created environment for data processing in which massive data sets (up to 20 billion of measurement points) can be automatically processed and visualized. Keywords- 3D shape measurement, structured light, cultural heritage 3D digitization, conservation documentation I.

Level 1: Include/Exclude

  • Papers must discuss situated information visualization* (by Willet et al.) in the application domain of CH.
    *A situated data representation is a data representation whose physical presentation is located close to the data’s physical referent(s).
    *A situated visualization is a situated data representation for which the presentation is purely visual – and is typically displayed on a screen.
  • Representation must include abstract data (e.g., metadata).
  • Papers focused solely on digital reconstruction without information visualization aspects are excluded.
  • Posters and workshop papers are excluded to focus on mature research contributions.
Show all meta-data