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Giant Handaxe (MAF21.F21) modelled through photogrammetry in .obj format 28th June 2023

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posted on 2023-06-30, 09:02 authored by Matthew PopeMatthew Pope, Letty IngreyLetty Ingrey
<p> </p> <p>Images used in creation of Photogrammetry model 1 of 4</p> <p>Multiple innovative digital techniques have been developed to study lithic artefacts (e.g.  Olson <em>et al</em>, 2014; Bennet, 2014; Caricola <em>et al</em>, 2018; Grosman <em>et al</em>, 2022 & 2011; García-Medrano et al 2023). Based on its flexibility and relative affordability, multi-image photogrammetry has become an increasingly useful analytical tool within archaeology (Magnani <em>et al, </em>2020) with Close-Range Photogrammetry being used for lithic analysis (e.g. Caricola et al, 2018; Porter et al, 2016 & 2019; Collins et al, 2019; Bennet, 2021; Timbrell et al, 2022).</p> <p>The imaging approach entails capturing a set of overlapping digital photographs of the subject which are processed with specialised software in order to produce 3D geometry.  </p> <p>This dataset comprises part of the dataset of 662 images used to capture the artefact as a compresse zipfile. By downloading these images, along with those of the other three zopfiles, the images can be used to remodel the artefact.</p>

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