Web-based discovery and integration of archaeological historic properties inventory data: The Digital Index of North American Archaeology (DINAA)

Joshua J. Wells, Eric C. Kansa, S. Kansa, Stephen J. Yerka, David G. Anderson, Thaddeus G. Bissett, K. Myers, R. DeMuth
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引用次数: 35

Abstract

Integrating data from different sources represents a tremendous research opportunity across the humanities, social, and natural sciences. However, repurposing data for uses not imagined or anticipated by their creators involves conceptual, methodological, and theoretical challenges. These are acute in archaeology, a discipline that straddles the humanities and sciences. Heritage protection laws shape archaeological practice and generate large bodies of data, largely untapped for research or other purposes. The Digital Index of North American Archaeology (DINAA) project adapts heritage management data sets for broader open and public uses. DINAA’s initial goal is to integrate government-curated public data from off-line and online digital repositories, from up to twenty US states, and which qualitatively and quantitatively describe over 500,000 archaeological sites in eastern North America. DINAA hopes to promote extension and reuse by government personnel, as well as by domestic and international researchers interested in the cultures, histories, artifacts, and behaviors described within these public data sets. DINAA innovatively applies methodologies and workflows typical of many ‘open science’ and digital humanities programs to these data sets. The distributed nature of data production, coupled with protections for sensitive data, add layers of complexity. Ethically negotiating these issues can wider the collaboration between stakeholder communities, and offer an unprecedented new view on human use of the North American landscape across vast regions and time scales. ................................................................................................................................................................................. Correspondence:
基于网络的考古历史财产清单数据的发现和整合:北美考古数字索引(DINAA)
整合来自不同来源的数据代表了跨越人文科学、社会科学和自然科学的巨大研究机会。然而,将数据重新用于其创建者想象不到或预料不到的用途涉及概念、方法和理论方面的挑战。这些问题在考古学这个横跨人文和科学的学科中尤为突出。遗产保护法塑造了考古实践,并产生了大量数据,这些数据大多未被用于研究或其他目的。北美考古数字索引(DINAA)项目将遗产管理数据集用于更广泛的开放和公共用途。DINAA的最初目标是整合来自美国20个州的离线和在线数字存储库的政府管理的公共数据,这些数据定性和定量地描述了北美东部超过50万个考古遗址。DINAA希望促进政府人员以及对这些公共数据集中所描述的文化、历史、人工制品和行为感兴趣的国内外研究人员的扩展和重用。DINAA创新地将许多“开放科学”和数字人文项目的典型方法和工作流程应用于这些数据集。数据生产的分布式特性,加上对敏感数据的保护,增加了复杂性。伦理谈判这些问题可以更广泛的利益相关者群体之间的协作,并提供前所未有的新观点对人类使用北美景观在广阔的地区和时间尺度 . .................................................................................................................................................................................通信:
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