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THE OSIRIS PROJECT
(OPTICAL SYSTEMS FOR INTERFEROMETRIC-PHOTOGRAMMETRIC RELIEF
INVESTIGATION AND SCANNING).
DEVELOPMENT OF A DEVICE FOR 3D NUMERICAL RECORDING OF
ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND EPIGRAPHIC DOCUMENTS
BY OPTOELECTRONIC PROCESSES
D. Laboury 3 , Y. Renotte b , B. Tilkens b , M. Dominique 15 , R. Billen c , Y. Cornet'
a Egyptological Dept, and Interdisciplinary Center for Archaeometry of the University of Liège (ICAUL), University of Liège,
13, route de Marche, B - 4190 Xhoris, D.Laboury@ulg.ac.be
h Hololab, Dept, of Physics, and ICAUL, University of Liège, allée du 6 Août, 17, B-4000 Liège, (y.renotte, B.Tilkens,
M.Dominique)@ulg. ac.be
c Dept, of Geomatics and ICAUL, University of Liège, allée du 6 Août, 17, B-4000 Liège, (Roland.Billen, ycomet)@ulg.ac.be
KEYWORDS: Archaeology, Optical Engineering, Metrology, Moiré, Photogrammetry
ABSTRACT:
Archaeology is permanently confronted with the problem of recording the objects of its study, since excavated relics of the Past are
always exposed to a progressive and often irremediable process of defacement, and, finally, of annihilation. In order to find a solution
to this very important and still unresolved problem, the OSIRIS project aims to develop one or several devices that allow by
optoelectronic processes an accurate, quick and easy to use recording, dedicated to the specific and very demanding needs of
Archaeology.
RÉSUMÉ:
L'Archéologie est continuellement confrontée au problème du relevé des objets de son étude, de par les altérations qu'implique
nécessairement, et souvent irrémédiablement, la mise au jour des vestiges enfouis du passé. Afin d'apporter une réponse à ce
problème crucial, qui n'a pas encore trouvé de solution idéale à ce jour, le présent projet se propose de développer une ou plusieurs
techniques de relevé opto-électronique qui permettent un enregistrement précis, rapide et souple d'emploi, appliqué aux besoins
spécifiques et particulièrement exigeants de l'étude archéologique.
1. INTRODUCTION
Archaeology, as the Science which studies the material remains
of human behaviour, naturally stands at one of the crossroads
between the human Sciences and Science (physics, chemistry,
biology, geology, geography, ...). This connection is precisely a
way to define what we are nowadays used to name
Archaeometry, that is the combination of laboratory techniques
with the traditional methodology of the historical and
archaeological investigation to deepen the analysis, the
knowledge and the interpretation of ancient works of art,
monuments and archaeological objects. Archaeology is also
permanently confronted with the problem of reading, recording
and conserving these material traces of human behaviour which
constitute its investigation field. The basic principles of the
OSIRIS Project are these very two essential dimensions of
archaeological research: on one hand, Archaeometry, the
synergy between historical Sciences and the laboratory
techniques of Science; and on the other hand, the study and
conservation of material remains or traces of the Past.
2. THE TRADITIONAL RECORDING TECHNIQUES
IN ARCHAEOLOGY AND ART HISTORY
The recordings needed by the different aspects of the
Archaeological research have a double aim: the creation of a
medium allowing to publish in the more accurate way the
studied object; and, even more importantly, the virtual
conservation of this object, or, at least, the conservation of the
historical information (in the broadest sense of the expression) it
reveals and preserves.
The conservation of archaeological objects is far from being a
simply theoretical problem. Indeed, in its very process of
revealing the relics of the Past, Archaeology is by definition
destructive: it always destroys the containing of the object it
aims to reveal, and the thus revealed content is then exposed to
new aggressions of its surrounding world, which in many cases
will damage it irreparably on a relatively short period of time, in
comparison to its age. No monument can avoid this
phenomenon of deterioration and, finally, of destruction. The
case of Ancient Egyptian archaeological heritage, whose study
is at the root of the OSIRIS project, clearly exemplifies this: the
especially dry, chemically and hygrometrically stable desert
ground of Egypt naturally allows the long-lasting preservation
of archaeological objects, even the more fragile ones, like
millenary papyrus, wooden artefacts or textiles. But, once
exposed to the open air, to its climatic variations, to nowadays
pollution and to human aggressions of all kind, these relics of
the Past decay at a very impressive speed, even those made in
the very hard stones (Figure 1, Bell, 1987, pi. 1).