Resources, Opportunities and Limits of Data and Open Source Tools Used in Preventive Archaeology †
Abstract
:1. Introduction: Archaeological Risk
- Preventive archaeology was coming of age, or at least approaching a developed perspective, exactly in the years of the Valletta Convention, which, also for Italy, intervened in a really significant moment, further pushing for a development of procedures;
- In the second half of the 2000s, both the Ministry of Culture and universities, separately (SITAR since 2005/2007) or jointly (the 2007 Joint Commission) developed projects for the creation of web atlases—generally at an urban/periurban scale—and planned a nation-wide system;
- After the ratification of the Valletta Convention and the growth of procedures and regulations of preventive archaeology, as well as the pressure from the economic system of developers and technical improvement of web interfaces, the strategy for wider and stronger open access systems started to become a reality, as the last SITAR improvement, MAGOH, GNA and many other projects demonstrate, after 2017;
- The foundation of the Istituto Centrale per l’Archeologia (ICA—Central Institute for Archaeology) in 2016, as part of a renewed organization of the Ministry of Culture, was a crucial step in this process, harmonized with and dealing with the development of the above point 3.
2. Preventive Archaeological Evaluation in Prodromic Phase
3. The Data Needed to Make a VPIA Report
- A general description of the characteristics of the development project design to be carried out (MOPR layer);
- A list (and map) of the areas and sites of archaeological interest located in the construction areas of the public or public interest work, as well as in the wider area affected by the works (buffer of 3 km radius), which justify the VPIA procedure (MOSI layer);
- A surface survey report (RCG);
- An aerial/satellite photointerpretation;
- A map of archaeological potential (VRP for areas and individual sites);
- A map of archaeological risk (VRD).
3.1. Data Collection from Already Known Sites, Past Research Results and Legally Protected (Registered) Sites
3.2. Current Cartography
3.3. Orthophotos, Satellite Images for Photointerpretation and Historical Cartography
4. SWOT Analysis
Strengths
| Weaknesses
|
Opportunities
| Threats
|
Strategy
|
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Vanzetti, A.; Marino, S. Resources, Opportunities and Limits of Data and Open Source Tools Used in Preventive Archaeology. Proceedings 2024, 96, 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2024096003
Vanzetti A, Marino S. Resources, Opportunities and Limits of Data and Open Source Tools Used in Preventive Archaeology. Proceedings. 2024; 96(1):3. https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2024096003
Chicago/Turabian StyleVanzetti, Alessandro, and Sara Marino. 2024. "Resources, Opportunities and Limits of Data and Open Source Tools Used in Preventive Archaeology" Proceedings 96, no. 1: 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2024096003
APA StyleVanzetti, A., & Marino, S. (2024). Resources, Opportunities and Limits of Data and Open Source Tools Used in Preventive Archaeology. Proceedings, 96(1), 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2024096003