The Digital Ossuary: 3D visualisation of a unique and endangered archaeological site
Elizabeth Craig-Atkins
Stephen Maddock
Dawn Hadley
Robin Scott
10.15131/shef.data.5368459.v1
https://orda.shef.ac.uk/articles/dataset/The_Digital_Ossuary_3D_visualisation_of_a_unique_and_endangered_archaeological_site/5368459
<p>This
project was funded by the University of Sheffield Digital Humanities
Exploration Fund in 2015.</p>
<p>The project integrated computer science and archaeological approaches
in an investigation of the subterranean medieval charnel chapel of Holy Trinity
church in Rothwell (Northamptonshire), which houses one of only two remaining <i>in situ</i> medieval ossuaries in England. The
chapel, which was constructed during the 13<sup>th</sup> century, houses
disinterred human skeletal remains radiocarbon dated to the 13<sup>th</sup>-15<sup>th</sup>
and 18<sup>th</sup>-19<sup>th</sup> centuries. While medieval charnelling was a
European-wide phenomenon, evidence has largely been lost in England following
the early 16<sup>th</sup>-century Reformation, and Rothwell is the most
complete surviving example of a charnel chapel with <i>in situ </i>medieval remains. Recent research within the Department of
Archaeology has suggested that these charnel structures served a much more
complex liturgical role than merely permitting the clearance of overly-full
graveyards (which has long been presumed to be their prosaic role); they also
provided places of pilgrimage and were the focus of intercessory devotion,
where the faithful could pray for the souls of the departed whilst in the
physical presence of their corporeal remains. Rothwell charnel chapel is,
hence, a site of major international significance, but analysis of the site is
hampered by issues of access and preservation. The proposed project has four
principal aims: </p>
<p>1. to develop analysis of the hitherto largely unstudied medieval charnel
chapel by collecting digital records of the charnel deposit and their
environment;</p><p></p>
<p>2. to enhance interpretation of the manner in which the ossuary was
utilized in the medieval period, through digital capturing of the spatial
arrangements within the chapel, and the range of medieval vantage points into
the chapel; </p>
<p>3. to present this fragile, and largely inaccessible (due to narrow stair
access, now blocked medieval windows and cramped internal space), heritage
resource to the public in a sustainable manner; and </p>
<p>4. to facilitate preservation of the ossuary, which is in a fragile state,
in the form of digital preservation <i>in
situ</i>. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>A Leica ScanStation P20 3D
scanner was used to capture a 3D point cloud of the charnel chapel. Seventeen
scans were taken at different locations and registered (using Leica Cyclone) to
produce a model containing 60 million points. This data set is supplied in the
following formats:</p><p>E57 file format – Oss_E57.e57</p><p>
</p><p>.ptx file format – Ossuary_PTX.ptx </p><p>Initial work was done (see
publications) to convert the point cloud into a 3D virtual reality model of the space.
A simplified (decimated) mesh containing approx. 3.5 million faces is available in
.obj format as mesh.zip (which contains mesh.obj, mesh.mtl, and eight supporting
texture files: tex_0.jpg to tex_7.jpg).</p><p> </p><p>Publications</p><p>Elizabeth Craig-Atkins, Jennifer
Crangle and Dawn Hadley. Rothwell Charnel Chapel – The nameless dead. Current
Archaeology magazine issue 321, November 2016. </p><p>Jenny Crangle, Elizabeth
Craig-Atkins, Dawn Hadley, Peter Heywood, Tom Hodgson, Steve Maddock, Robin
Scott, Adam Wiles. The Digital Ossuary: Rothwell (Northamptonshire, UK). Proc.
CAA2016, the 44th Annual Conference on Computer Applications and Quantitative
Methods in Archaeology, Oslo, 29 March – 2 April, Session 06 Computer tools for
depicting shape and detail in 3D archaeological models.</p><p>Wuyang Shui, Steve Maddock, Peter
Heywood, Elizabeth Craig-Atkins, Jennifer Crangle, Dawn Hadley and Rab Scott.
Using semi-automatic 3D scene reconstruction to create a digital medieval
charnel chapel. Proc. CGVC2016, 15-16 September, 2016, Bournemouth University,
United Kingdom.</p><p>
</p><p>Wuyang Shui, Jin Liu, Pu Ren,
Steve Maddock and Mingquan Zhou. Automatic planar shape segmentation from
indoor point clouds. Proc. VRCAI2016, 3-4 December 2016, Zhuhai, China.</p>
2017-09-06 09:42:16
point cloud data sets
archaeology-based
human remains
funerary archaeology
Archaeology
Applied Computer Science