6,365 research outputs found
Nuclear Physics for Cultural Heritage
Nuclear physics applications in medicine and energy are well known and widely reported. Less well known are the many important nuclear and related techniques used for the study, characterization, assessment and preservation of cultural heritage. There has been enormous progress in this field in recent years and the current review aims to provide the public with a popular and accessible account of this work.
The Nuclear Physics Division of the EPS represents scientists from all branches of nuclear physics across Europe. One of its aims is the dissemination of knowledge about nuclear physics and its applications. This review is led by Division board member Anna Macková, Head of the Tandetron Laboratory at the Nuclear Physics Institute of the Czech Academy of Sciences, and the review committee includes four other members of the nuclear physics board interested in this area: Faiçal Azaiez, Johan Nyberg, Eli Piasetzky and Douglas MacGregor. To create a truly authoritative account, the Scientific Editors have invited contributions from leading experts across Europe, and this publication is the combined result of their work.
The review is extensively illustrated with important discoveries and examples from archaeology, pre-history, history, geography, culture, religion and curation, which underline the breadth and importance of this field. The large number of groups and laboratories working in the study and preservation of cultural heritage across Europe indicate the enormous effort and importance attached by society to this activity
The basis of resilience in forest tree species and its use in adaptive forest management in Britain
Forest ecosystems face a range of challenges in the coming decades, of which climate change, pests and diseases are the most serious. These challenges will be overlaid on a background of historically modified and fragmented forests managed in a wide range of ways for different objectives. As northern temperate forests are species-poor in a global context, their resilience to these challenges is fundamentally dependent on the resilience of individual species. However, dealing with each new threat as it arises is unlikely to be cost effective and in any case, probably not practically feasible. A better strategy for establishing long term resilience would be to harness evolutionary processes, to maximise the capability of individual tree species to respond to new threats by the reorganisation of populations via natural selection; in other words, to be resilient. Such processes depend on the internal variability of species, their mechanisms of dispersal and their ability to recruit new genotypes to a population. In this paper we review the theoretical concept of resilience, examine how it might be applied to tree populations and assess the state of knowledge of Britain’s forests from this perspective
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Oriental enlightenment: the problematic military experiences and cultural claims of Count Maurice Auguste comte de Benyowsky in Formosa during 1771
Maurice Benyowsky's colourful version of his global adventures during the heady, expansive days of the late-Enlightenment remains still as an historical account, and is perhaps destined for reification at a time of romantic, postmodernist cultural affirmation. Yet this paper argues that within it there lies a virile and possibly dangerous Orientalism, one at least partially based upon a lurid, opportunistic and self-seeking fabrication of his visit to Taiwan (Formosa) in the year 1771. This paper examines the veracity, provenance and historiography of the Benyowsky account of late-eighteenth century Formosa, both as an exercise in one facet of Taiwanese history and as some exploration of the origin and maintenance of European views of the "other" and of the "orient" as they were transforming during the late-Enlightenment period. Furthermore a principal task is to provide an historiographical analysis that illustrates both the initial reasons for the acceptance of Benyowsky's lurid account as well as the wider contexts of its long life as a seemingly reliable and authentic tale. Questions remain as to the cultural contexts of any general acceptance of otherwise doubtful stories, experiments, claims and "adventures". Here there is little doubt that the original Memoirs were given greater credence by Benyowsky's talent in self-fashioning his character and status as those of a reliable gentleman
Courier, Volume XXVII, Number 2, Fall 1992
A Dominican Gradual ofSaints, circa 1500 / George Catalano, p. 3 -- Stephen Crane at Claverack College: A New Reading / Thomas A. Gullason, p. 33 -- Fenimore Cooper\u27s Libel Suits / Constantine Evans, p. 47 -- The Kipling Collection at Syracuse / Thomas Pinney, p. 75 -- Fore-edge Paintings at Syracuse University / Jeff Weber, p. 89 -- News of the Syracuse University Library and the Library Associates, p. 115
Hyperspectral image analysis for questioned historical documents.
This thesis describes the application of spectroscopy and hyperspectral image
processing to examine historical manuscripts and text. Major activities
in palaeographic and manuscript studies include the recovery of illegible or
deleted text, the minute analyses of scribal hands, the identification of inks
and the segmentation and dating of text. This thesis describes how Hyperspectral
Imaging (HSI), applied in a novel manner, can be used to perform
quality text recovery, segmentation and dating of historical documents. The
non-destructive optical imaging process of Spectroscopy is described in detail
and how it can be used to assist historians and document experts in
the exemption of aged manuscripts. This non-destructive optical method
of analysis can distinguish subtle differences in the reflectance properties of
the materials under study. Many historically significant documents from
libraries such as the Royal Irish Academy and the Russell Library at the
National University of Ireland, Maynooth, have been the selected for study
using the hyperspectral imaging technique. Processing techniques have are
described for the applications to the study of manuscripts in a poor state
of conservation. The research provides a comprehensive overview of Hyperspectral
Imaging (HSI) and associated statistical and analytical methods,
and also an in-depth investigation of the practical implementation of such
methods to aid document analysts. Specifically, we provide results from employing
statistical analytical methods including principal component analysis
(PCA), independent component analysis (ICA) and both supervised and automatic
clustering methods to historically significant manuscripts and text
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such as Leabhar na hUidhre, a 12th century Irish text which was subject to
part-erasure and rewriting, a 16th Century pastedown cover, and a multi-ink
example typical of that found in, for example, late medieval administrative
texts such as Gttingen’s kundige bok. The purpose of which is to achieve
an overall greater insight into the historical context of the document, which
includes the recovery or enhancement of faded or illegible text or text lost
through fading, staining, overwriting or other forms of erasure. In addition,
we demonstrate prospect of distinguishing different ink-types, and furnishing
us with details of the manuscript’s composition, all of which are refinements,
which can be used to answer questions about date and provenance. This process
marks a new departure for the study of manuscripts and may provide
answer many long-standing questions posed by palaeographers and by scholars
in a variety of disciplines. Furthermore, through text retrieval, it holds
out the prospect of adding considerably to the existing corpus of texts and
to providing very many new research opportunities for coming generations
of scholars
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