Friday, November 11, 2011

News from the CDLI: Colgate University Libraries cuneiform collection

Colgate University Libraries cuneiform collection in CDLI 
The Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative (CDLI <http://www.cdli.ucla.edu/>), in partnership with the Colgate University Libraries, Special Collections (CUL-SC, <http://exlibris.colgate.edu/speccoll/>), is pleased to announce the addition of new digital content to its web offerings.

The 48 cuneiform artifacts in the Colgate University Libraries consist of 43 Ur III accounts, four Old Akkadian, and one Old Babylonian text. In June of this year, UCLA graduate student Michael Heinle was kindly allowed to scan the artifacts as part of a digitization mission through upstate New York, and the results of the CUL effort have now been added to CDLI pages, viewable at <http://tinyurl.com/86ot84h> (one text [<http://www.cdli.ucla.edu/P142505>] could not be located at the time of his visit). According to our records, 47 of the texts have been published in some form: seven by David I. Owen in MVN 15 (1991; and in JCS 24 [1971-1972] 150ff.), 40 by Daniel C. Snell & Carl H. Lager in YOS 18 (1991; also in part in Snell, ASJ 11 [1989] 159ff., and the big damgar Ur-Dumuzida account YOS 18, 122 in ASJ 11, 200-204 and YNER 8, 3 [see <http://www.cdli.ucla.edu/P112495>, a continuation of the running account STA 22 = <http://www.cdli.ucla.edu/P130372>]). Only ColgUL 48 <http://www.cdli.ucla.edu/P423462> is not known by us to have been edited, and we welcome publication reference, or notice of interest in publishing this sealed Old Babylonian document.

The imaging and image processing were made possible by funding from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and are part of the on-going mission of CDLI to ensure the long-term digital preservation of ancient inscriptions on cuneiform tablets, and, in furtherance of cuneiform research, to provide persistent, free global access to all available text artifact data.

For the CDLI and the CUL-SC:
Sarah Keen, Head of Special Collections and University Archivist, Colgate University
Robert K. Englund, Director, CDLI

Additions to the Corpus of South Arabian Inscriptions

Corpus of South Arabian Inscriptions
http://csai.humnet.unipi.it/csai/html/immagini/testata_home.jpg
November 2011

Maps and archeological sites information

New section of CSAI on archeological sites' info and new map's functions


September 2011

Corpora of Inscriptions of undefined language

The Corpus collecting the texts of undefined South Arabian language has been added to CSAI


September 2011

Corpora of Sabaic inscriptions

Corpora of Ancient Sabaic, Middle Sabaic, Raydanite and Undated Sabaic texts added to CSAI

September 2011

Corpus of Marginal Minaic inscriptions

The new corpus of the Minaic texts from outside South Arabia has been added to CSAI


April 2011

Corpora updated

Unpublished inscriptions from the British Museum and the Yemeni Museums added to the corpora by language


February 2011

Corpus of Minaic Inscriptions

Minaic corpus updated

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Huehnergard's A Grammar of Akkadian: A new edition (3rd), and online updates to the 2nd

by John Huehnergard
Third edition
Harvard Semitic Studies - HSS 45
Harvard Semitic Museum / Eisenbrauns, 2011
List Price: $54.99
Permanent link: http://www.eisenbrauns.com/item/HUEGRAMMA

In the third edition of A Grammar of Akkadian, changes have been made in the section on the nom­i­n­al morpheme -ån (§20.2) and the sections on the meaning of the D stem (§24.3) and the Gt stem (§33.1(b)); these revisions reflect recent scholarship in Akkadian grammar. For those who have earlier editions of the book, pdfs of these revisions are available here (PDF). 

Other changes include minor revisions in wording in the presentation of the grammar in a few other sections; a number of new notes to some of the readings; additions to the glosses of a small number of words in the lesson vocabularies (and the Glossary and English–Akkadian word list); and updates of the resources available for the study of Akkadian, and of the bibliography. 

A new appendix (F) has been added, giving Hebrew and other Semitic cognates of the Akkadian words in the lesson vocabularies. This appendix is also available here (PDF). 

The pagination of the first and second editions has for the most part been retained, apart from the insertion of the new appendix and a few minor deviations elsewhere.

Open Access Journal: Trabalhos do CNANS : Arqueologia náutica

Trabalhos do CNANS : Arqueologia náutica
Série de estudos de âmbito da arqueologia náutica e subaquática



Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Open Access Journal: Azerbaijan Archeology

Azerbaijan Archeology
ISSN 1027-3875
http://www.azerbaijanarcheology.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/arxeologiya.jpg

The first issue of “Azerbaijan archeology” was published in 1999.

The origins and progress of the world archaeology, the great archaeological discoveries, interesting excavations and articles of Azerbaijani as well as world – wide known archaeologists, the wide information about our colleagues are represented in this journal.

Journal also intends to assist students teaching process and for this reason there are two main sections of “Azerbaijan archaeology” called “For students and Subsidiaries”.

The section “Occupied monuments” is one of the main parts of the journal. This section is aimed to show the general public with famous archaeological monuments being under occupation. 

Theoretical, research and popular scientific articles related to current problems of Azerbaijan and world archaeology are published in this journal. The journal interprets the scientific basis, methodology of archaeology, contemporary problems and achievements of this ancient science.

In general this journal is for the broad masses interested in the archaeology
1999, Vol. 1, No 1-2, [16]
1999, Vol. 1, No 3-4, [18]
2000, Vol. 2, No 1-2, [24]
2000, Vol. 2, No 3-4, [24]
2001, Vol. 3, No 1-4, [28]
2002, Vol. 4, No 1-2, [28]
2002, Vol. 4, No 3-4, [29]
2003, Vol. 5, No 1-4, [22]
2004, Vol. 6, No 1-4, [23]
2005, Vol. 7, No 1-4, [22]
2006, Vol.:8 Num.:1-4 
2007, Vol.:10 Num.:3-4
2007, Vol.:9 Num.:1-2 
2008, Vol.:11 Num:1-2
2009 vol.:12 Num:2
2009, vol.:12 Num.:1

Open Access Journal: as-Sikka السكة The Online Journal of The Islamic Coins Group

First posted in AWOL on 29 October 2009,   as-Sikka السكة The Online Journal of The Islamic Coins Group is no longer available at the original website of The Islamic Coins Group. It remains accessible is several iterations at the IA Wayback Machine, the most recent dating to 10 July 2011. Until and unless it turns up again on its own terms, I'll keep the link to the archive.
ISSN 1496-4414
as-Sikka  has been established to promote the study of Islamic numismatics through the e-publication of research articles, review articles, communications, and shorter reviews and studies. It is designed to allow members of the Islamic Coins Group as well as other contributors, to participate in activating Islamic numismatic research in a free and easily accessible medium.

We have shed the traditional publishing methodology and publish One volume per year. This volume, however, will be continually added to, and updated throughout the year, and will become final when the year is done.

oculu-Z, the open source, open data platform for collaborative Computer Vision technology

oculu-Z, the open source, open data platform for collaborative Computer Vision technology
http://oculu-z.sourceforge.net/joomla/images/logo/header.jpg
Here you will find software, data and documentation related to 3D reconstruction from digital images. There are many possible ways of generating a 3D model from a series of images. This project focuses on the Structure from Motion (SfM) approach. SfM is an elegant and robust software-only method that requires nothing but  a series of overlapping images.

Many of our project members work in the fields of Cultural Heritage and Archaeology, which is why you will find many datasets, research studies and application examples from these areas on our site. But we welcome contributions and input from people with all sorts of research and professional backgrounds who are interested in this technology.

There is also a strong interested in combining multi-view 3D reconstruction with GIS technology to enable the production of digital elevation models and rectified aerial imagery from overlapping photographs.

These are our main web pages. We also have a Wiki for evolving, user-contributed content and a Mailing List, which should be your first stop for questions or ideas concerning this project and the content we host. You can find the links to our other web resources in the footer of every page on this site.