Showing posts with label Science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Science. Show all posts

Monday, June 25, 2018

Open Access Journal: ArchéoSciences: Revue d'Archéométrie

ArchéoSciences: Revue d'Archéométrie
ISSN: 1960-1360
ISSN électronique: 2104-3728
http://archeosciences.revues.org/docannexe/file/3383/as35_couv-small200.jpg

ArchéoSciences, Revue d'Archéométrie, éditée annuellement par le Groupe des Méthodes Pluridisciplinaires Contribuant à l'Archéologie (G.M.P.C.A.), contient des articles, en français ou en anglais, sur toute recherche originale et inédite traitant de l'application de diverses techniques scientifiques (sciences physiques, chimiques, mathématiques, sciences de la terre et de l'univers, et sciences de la nature et de la vie) à la résolution de problématiques archéologiques ou de la mise au point de nouvelles méthodes. Les articles peuvent porter sur les méthodologies et leurs limites, sur des recherches scientifiques fondamentales ou des techniques spécialisées, sous réserve que leur justification archéologique soit clairement explicitée.

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Wednesday, May 25, 2016

The Archimedes Project

The Archimedes Project

The Archimedes Project of the MAx Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin has created a testbed for developing and exploring model interactive environments for the history of mechanics. It also serves as a proof-of-concept project for open digital libraries for topics in the history of science designed to integrate research and knowledge dissemination in new ways. The project was funded by the "Digital Libraries Initiative Phase 2" program of the National Science Foundation and was a joint endeavor of
  • the Classics Department at Harvard University,
  • the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science ( MPIWG) in Berlin,
  • the English Department at the University of Missouri at Kansas City, and
  • the Perseus Project at Tufts University.
It also engaged a wider network of scholars supported in particular by the "Programme International de Coopération Scientifique" (PICS). Numerous treatises on mechanics as well as other forms of documentation of mechanical knowledge and practices constitute the project corpus. 

Ongoing research at the MPIWG on the long-term development of mental models of mechanical thinking and their manifestation in technical terminologies, inferences of practitioners, engineers, and scientists plays an important role in the testbed design. The testbed also requires a powerful, linguistically based information technology for handling the variety of languages occurring in the source materials.

Source documents are being prepared with tools such as automatic morphological analysis of Latin, Greek and Italian, and semantic linking of sources to general and technical, modern and historical dictionaries and reference works

Collection of the Archimedes project
References:
DelMonte, Guidubaldo; Renn, Jürgen [Hrsg.]; Damerow, Peter [Hrsg.], Guidobaldo del Monte's Mechanicorum liber, Berlin: Edition Open Access (Max Planck research library for the history and development of knowledge), 2010
Source information Permanent URI:http://echo.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/MPIWG:8SZD8BV0