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The papers that make up this volume are based on the lectures given at a joint BritishAcademy/Royal Society discussion meeting entitled Images and Artefacts of the Ancient World, which was held at the Royal Society in London in December 2000. The meeting was attended by approximately 100 people, whose interests spanned a remarkable diversity of disciplines—from ancient history to electronics—but who were united in their interest in applying recent developments in imaging, image analysis, and image display and diffusion to objects of material culture in order to enhance historians’ understanding of the period from which the objects came (in all cases here treated, the remote past, but not only the classical world). A further consideration, which we specifically addressed in this forum, is the fact that such imaging techniques now offer the researcher valuable insurance against the processes of deterioration to which such artefacts are inevitably subject.
The idea for such a discussion meeting was an outcome of our joint research project, generously supported by the Leverhulme Trust in 1997 and by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) in 1998–2001, on the image enhancement of incised writing-tablets from Roman Britain, in which we are attempting to develop new signal-processing techniques for damaged and abraded documents with three-dimensional writing and, in many cases, palimpsest texts. Two papers arising directly from this ongoing project are included as the first two chapters in the present volume.
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