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With
Dr Mhairi Maxwell, Dr Stuart Jeffrey, Prof Sian Jones & Dr Alex Hale
The ACCORD ProjectArchaeology Community CoProduction of Research Data
Cara Jones Archaeology Scotland
Brave New [digital] World?
The ACCORD ProjectAHRC Funded, 2014/15 (15 Months)Connected Communities and Digital Transformations programme
Partners:- Digital Design Studio, Glasgow School of Art- University of Manchester- Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland- Archaeology Scotland
Investigators:- Dr Stuart Jeffrey – PI- Prof Sian Jones and Dr Alex Hale – CIs- Dr Mhairi Maxwell – PDRA- Cara Jones – project partner
Research Questions
• The value of coproduction; how does
this change peoples’ relationship to the
site or object? Does it give people a
different sense of ownership?
• What are the barriers to digital
technology?
• How are forms of existing community-
based social value associated with sites
and places addressed and transformed
through engagement with 3D digital
technologies?
Project Aims
The ACCORD project is working together with communities
across Scotland to co-design and co-produce 3D digital models of heritage places and monuments.
ACCORD is taking the technologies of 3D modelling, recording, visualisation and printing out of the domain of specialists and experts.
Together we seek to explore how forms of community-based social value associated with sites and places are addressed and transformed through engagement with 3D digital technologies (photogrammetry, RTI, 3D printing and sometimes Lidar).
ACCORD Activities: together we create
• 3D records; RTI, Photogrammetry,
3D printing
• Using consumer level technology
• Integrated with user generated
contextual content and statements
of social value in an open access
online archive (at the Archaeology
Data Service).
ACCORD Workshop
• Photogrammetry
• RTI (Reflective Transformation Imaging))
ACCORD Projects
Camas Nan Geall,
Ardnamurchan
Glendaruel, Argyll and Bute
Glasgow Necropolis
Cullingsburgh, Shetland
Glendarual – rediscovering a cup-marked stone
“It’s like magic!” Cathy, CGDT archaeology group member.
Glasgow Necropolis
“The process itself forces you to examine the monument in detail”
[the results] “focuses attention, enhances what is already there, made things visible
[that I had] not seen before”
Ardnamurchan
Copyright: RCAHMS1976
Group felt that the results could not replace the original but could be used as an objective analytical tool
Cullingsburgh
“[this process] allows for more possibilities for interpretation”
Sharing the results
Sharing the results
Conclusions?
Thank you!
• Ardnamurchan Community Archaeology Group
• Bressay Local History Group
• Friends of Glasgow Necropolis
• Glendaruel Community Woodland Archaeology Group
• AHRC, Glasgow School of Arts, Archaeology Scotland, RCHAMS