THE RESEARCH AND APPLICATION OF SPATIAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
IN CULTURAL HERITAGE CONSERVATION
— CASE STUDY ON GRAND CANAL OF CHINA
Feng Mao, Ze Liu*, Wensheng Zhou, Jianxi Huang, Qiang Li
School of Architecture, Tsinghua University, - liuze06@mails.tsinghua.edu.cn
KEY WORDS: Spatial Information Sciences, Cultural Heritage, Grand Canal of China, Research, Application
ABSTRACT:
This work is part of a multidisciplinary research project, within the National Key Technology R&D Program, “The Research and
Application of Spatial Information Technology for conservation of large-scale heritage sites”, developed in collaboration with
archaeologists and researchers from the field of geoinfomatics and hydrology, which aims at the application of spatial information
technology for cultural heritage conservation, especially the large-scale heritage sits, a case study on Grand Canal of China is carried
out. This paper presents the principal achievements we have gotten and puts forward some challenging issuers accordingly. At first,
the related definitions are discussed; and some successful cases are reviewed. After the review, an integrated framework for the
application of spatial information technology in conserving cultural heritage is conceived, based upon analysis of whole conserving
process, information transferring flow, and domain model. Then the content and framework of this research project are studied by
the logic and technical structure. Some key methods involved are discussed subsequently; also the main results and new findings are
investigated in details. Finally combing with the opinions from experts of cultural heritage conservation, this paper concludes the
project’s established results objectively, and present the research plan in the future. The involved contents of this study could be
found on http://geospatial.arch.tsinghua.edu.cn, a website developed for this project especially.
1. INTRODUCTION
There are many successful examples indicating that spatial
information technology (SIT) is very useful and necessary to
conserve historical cultural heritages, including the serial
processes of prospecting, investigating, extracting, preservation
planning, documenting and monitoring. Especially Geography
Information System (GIS) and Remote Sensing (RS) have been
widely used to carry out related activities.
1.1 Cultural Heritage and Cultural Heritage Conservation
A concise discussion and perhaps definition of “cultural
heritage” and “cultural heritage conservation” is conducted here
in order to confine the scope of this study, and ensure the
common understanding of the terms mentioned in this paper.
1.1.1 Cultural Heritage
Cultural can be represented by material objects like buildings,
paintings and monuments, but also non-material manifestations
like language, dance, song, cuisine, custom, religion, landscape,
literature, art, philosophy and, even television programs
(Ogleby, 1995). In 1954 the General Conference of UNESCO
adopted the term, cultural heritage, as an international
convention on the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event
of Armed Conflict (known as Hague Convention), which refers
cultural property as tangible and physical objects. The similar
meaning can be found from the famous Convention Concerning
the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage in
1972, also by General Conference of UNESCO. For the sake of
this study the above meaning will suffice as it is generally
accepted. Much of this paper will concentrate on SIT
applications to material cultural heritage, but it will also address
some issues of intangible cultural heritages along Grand Canal
of China (GCC).
1.1.2 Cultural Heritage Conservation
Following the hints of above dissertations, it can be discerned
an integral process of cultural heritage conservation should at
least include 1) prospecting for cultural heritage and
investigating correspondingly; 2) evaluation of cultural heritage,
including its values, preservation status, potential hazards and
so on; 3) establishing and carrying out reasonable preservation
planning; 4) effective monitoring on cultural heritage and
feedback in time. In the section 2, a flow chart of applying SIT
in each aspects of cultural heritage conservation will be brought
out and discussed detailedly.
1.2 SIT Applied to Cultural Heritages Conservation
1.2.1 Digital Recording and Analysis Based upon GIS
Last decades witnessed the rapid increase of applying GIS to
preserve cultural heritage. GIS is mainly used for cultural
resource inventory applications, protections planning, impact
assessment studies, facilities management and archaeological
research applications. In 1990s UNESCO utilized GIS to
integrate data efficiently from the field of archaeology,
geography, hydrology, weather, environment and demographic
data in the Angkor Zoning and Environment Management Plan,
Cambodia. Then the usefulness of GIS was demonstrated in
other UNESCO pilot sites at Hue, Viet Nam and Vat Phou, Lao
PDR and other sites in Europe, Australia and North America
(Paul Box, 1990).
GIS, especially spatial analysis plays a significant role in
'archaeological research, etc, landscape archaeology, predictive
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