Full text: Proceedings, XXth congress (Part 5)

International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B5. Istanbul 2004 
  
  
Figure 8. Montage of the orthorectified photographs with 
the layout of some hieroglyphic signs 
The epigraphy and iconography of the column have been drawn 
on the orthophotographs using Bezier curves. Procedures 
developed for an interactive construction of the curves allow to 
modify them at will, so as to adapt them to the signs in the best 
possible way. From the layout, the curves can be grouped and 
recorded as « standard signs » that will be inserted afterwards at 
a particular place and at a desired scale, thus making it 
unnecessary to draw a sign several times over. Each sign can 
also be recorded with its original position on the picture. 
The goal is to make up a database with the standard signs that 
will later be used and questioned like any database. Henceforth, 
the epigraphic survey can be carried out more quickly with the 
developed method, not only on a wall but also on a column. The 
publication of the texts can still be made in paper form, but can 
now be in numerical form too. Moreover, the method developed 
by the GRCAO for the epigraphic survey enables the user to 
gather data about the meaning and the geometrical shape of 
each sign. This will in turn lead to statistical studies on the 
hieroglyphs’ form, to automatic translations of the texts and to 
the search for missing elements, based on geometric as well as 
grammatical criteria. 
The method introduced in this paper for the epigraphic survey 
of conical surfaces has first been carried out on a column of the 
British Museum (Red granite column with palm capital, 19^ 
Dynasty, about 1250 BC, from Heracleopolis), because of its 
medium size and the good preservation of its inscriptions. It has 
later been applied on a column of the Great Hypostyle Hall of 
the Karnak Temple, for which we had had seven black and 
white shots. This column is much bigger (2.8 m in diameter, 
13.17 m in height) than the museum's column, so the 
development seems to be rectangular. Some hieroglyphic signs 
have also been drawn on it. (Figure 9) 
4. CONCLUSION 
This paper has presented an epigraphic survey method for all 
the conical and cylindrical elements of the Egyptian temples. 
One aim of the study being the publication of the hieroglyphic 
texts and iconography, the result is in two-dimensional format. 
In consequence, we lost the three-dimensional aspect of the 
conical surfaces. But, knowing that the inscriptions engraved on 
the monuments have been deteriorating at great speed for a few 
years, it is primordial for the KHHP’s researchers to have a 
simple and rapid method to survey and publish the texts of the 
Great Hypostyle Hall of the Karnak Temple. The study has 
therefore been conducted in this perspective. The computer 
  
Figure 9. Epigraphic survey on the developed surface 
of a column of the Karnak Hypostyle Hall 
tools developed are simple to use by the epigraphists on the 
field, with minimal computer equipment (that’s why the tools 
have been made in the AutoCAD’s programming language). 
The ultimate aim of the research conducted by the GRCAO is to 
conceive a computer assistant to validate reconstruction 
hypotheses in archaeology that will integrate the newly 
developed tools described in this paper. It is an effective 
example of computer modelling use both in the fields of cultural 
heritage and of architectural reconstitution in archaeology. 
This project was made possible thanks to funding form the 
Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada. 
REFERENCES 
References form Journals : 
Shakarji, Craig M., 1998. Least-Squares Fitting Algorithms of 
the NIST Algorithm Testing System, Journal of Research of the 
National Institute of Standards and Technology, Vol. 103, No.6. 
References from Books : 
; ; d 
Karara, H. M., 1989. Non-topographic Photogrammetry, 2" 
edition. Sciences and Engineering Series, Falls Church, 
Virginia. American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote 
Sensing. ISBN 0-944-42610-7, 445 p. 
Kraus, K., Jansa, J., Kager H., 1997. Photogrammetry. 
Advanced Methods and Applications, vol. 2, 4" edition. 
Dümmler, Bonn. Translated by Peter Stewardson. ISBN 3-427- 
78694-3, 466 p. 
Kraus, K., Waldhaüsl, P., 1998. Manuel de Photogrammétrie. 
Principes et procédés fondamentaux, vol.1. Éditions Hermès, 
Paris. Translated by Pierre Grussenmeyer and Olivier Reis, 
Mayenne. ISBN 2-86601-656-4, 407 p. 
References from Other Literature : 
Parisel, C., 2003. Rapport de travail sur le relevé des colonnes et 
de l'épigraphie sur les colonnes. GRCAO's internal research 
paper. January, 6 p. 
Parisel, C., 2002. Stratégie informatique : programme relevé. 
GRCAO's internal research paper. March, 17 p. 
     
   
  
  
  
     
   
     
   
     
    
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
    
   
  
  
  
  
    
    
  
     
   
    
   
     
   
   
   
   
    
    
    
      
   
    
    
    
   
        
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