On Thursday 24th April, I gave a presentation on my PhD research project (GSTAR) to the 2014 Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology conference, Paris, France. The presentation formed part of the session S07 Ontologies and standards for improving interoperability of archaeological data: from models towards practical experiences in various contexts organised by Anne-Violaine Szabados, Katell Briatte, Maria Emilia Masci, and Christophe Tufféry. Reinhard Foertsch and Sebastian Rahtz chaired the session.
Some notes on the session can be found here.
The abstract describes the talk, which covered work to date in the first year of the project:
Much work has been undertaken over the past decade relating to the application of semantic approaches to archaeological data resources, notably by English Heritage and the University of South Wales. These two organisations, over the course of a number of projects, developed an archaeological extension to the CIDOC CRM ontology through the Ontological Modelling Project (Cripps & May, 2010), then applied this to a number of archaeological resources through the subsequent STAR project (May, Binding and Tudhope, 2011), implementing tools to facilitate integration of other resources through the STELLAR project (May, Binding, Tudhope, & Jeffrey, 2012), and now, in partnership with the Bespoke HER User Group, RCAHMS, RCAHMW and Wessex Archaeology, are implementing SKOS based vocabularies and associated tools to enable the augmentation of these semantic resources through the SENESCHAL project.
From the outset, it was observed that the spatial component of archaeological data would be a key element, archaeological data being inherently spatial in nature. To date, most current applications of spatial semantics in the heritage sector have focussed on place names and named locations for sites and monuments and object provenances. The GSTAR project aims to extend semantic approaches to archaeological data fully into the geospatial domain and is instead focussing on the detailed spatial data emerging from archaeological excavation and survey work and is investigating approaches for the creation, use, management and dissemination of such spatial data within a geosemantic framework, building on the CIDOC CRM, with particular reference to sharing and integration of disparate resources.
This paper will present work to date in the first year of the GSTAR project. This has been centred on the identification of suitable platforms and methods for the integration of semantic and geospatial data including comparisons of different approaches emerging from the Semantic Web and Geospatial research communities. Testing and prototyping has been accomplished using sample data from the Archaeology Data Service, making use of available geospatial and (geo)semantic tools, both FOSS and commercial.
Cripps, P. and K. May 2010. To OO or not to OO? Revelations from Ontological Modelling of an Archaeological Information System, in: Nicolucci, F. and S. Hermon (eds.), Beyond the Artifact. Digital Interpretation of the Past. Proceedings of CAA2004, Prato 13–17 April 2004. Archaeolingua, Budapest, pp. 59-63.
May, K., C. Binding and D. Tudhope 2011. A STAR is Born: Some Emerging Semantic Technologies for Archaeological Resources, in: Jerem, E., F. Redő and V. Szeverényi (eds.), On the Road to Reconstructing the Past. Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology (CAA). Proceedings of the 36th International Conference. Budapest, April 2-6, 2008. Archeaeolingua, Budapest, pp. 111-116 (CD-ROM 402-408).
May, K., C. Binding, D. Tudhope and S. Jeffrey 2012. Semantic Technologies Enhancing Links and Linked Data for Archaeological Resources, in: Zhou, M., I. Romanowska, Z. Wu, P. Xu and P. Verhagen (eds.), Revive the Past. Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology (CAA). Proceedings of the 39th International Conference, Beijing, April 12-16.. Pallas Publications, Amsterdam, pp. 261-272.
The presentation is available on Slideshare:
The presentation also prompted some positive comments on Twitter, which was lovely:
Next it's @pauljcripps on 'Geosemantic Tools for Archaeological Research' (GeoSPARQL). Looking forward to this! #caa2014
— Marcus Smith (@carwash) April 24, 2014
Geo semantic linked data from @pauljcripps at #caa2014 now. #shabba #gstar pic.twitter.com/IrbbyOuvcu
— Daniel Pett (@portableant) April 24, 2014
@pauljcripps all archaeological data inherently has a spatial aspect – needs to be addressed by #SemanticWeb #caa2014
— Frank Lynam (@flynam) April 24, 2014
@pauljcripps explaining how to integrate geospatial data into CRM-EH; notes that objects accessioned into museums can lose spatial context
— Adam Rabinowitz (@adamrabinowitz) April 24, 2014
@pauljcripps gives a great tour around the issues of Geospatial semantics for archaeological data #caa2014
— Keith May (@Keith_May) April 24, 2014
Nice to see @pauljcripps being able to re-use Channel Tunnel data from @ADS_Update as geosemantic linked data #caa2014
— Julian D Richards (@Julian62523002) April 24, 2014
Too bad @sgillies isn't here for @pauljcripps' presentation on geospatial linked data at #caa2014
— Ethan Gruber (@ewg118) April 24, 2014
@ewg118 @sgillies @pauljcripps +1 – one of Paul's rare people who understand both #linkeddata and #gis (even if not fan of latter) #caa2014
— Adam Rabinowitz (@adamrabinowitz) April 24, 2014
@ewg118 @sgillies @pauljcripps any talk on geojson + jsonld? I really want patterns to build toward! #lawdi
— Eric Kansa (@ekansa) April 24, 2014
@pauljcripps good talk. You can use our data if it helps.
— Daniel Pett (@portableant) April 24, 2014
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