Search results for "Econometrics"

showing 10 items of 3730 documents

Two operative risk indicators as tools for negotiating contracts between curators of Museums and HVAC technical services providers

2020

Abstract The purpose of Heating, Ventilating and Air-Conditioning (HVAC) systems in museums is to properly control important microclimate parameters; such systems, in fact, apart from ensuring the visitors’ wellbeing, are requested to guarantee suitable indoor conditions for the proper conservation of the important cultural goods hosted by museums. Hence, in case of disservice, or interruption due to maintenance interventions, it is important to quantify the economic damage induced to exhibited and/or stored works of art (or even to the building museum itself). Accordingly, it is essential to guarantee the shortest possible period of disservice during which probable damages for the works of…

ArcheologyEnvironmental conditionMaterials Science (miscellaneous)media_common.quotation_subjectControl (management)Psychological interventionConservationStipulationWorks of art preservationHVACRisk indexeMuseumEconomic costHVAC management and maintenance service contractSpectroscopymedia_commonSettore ING-IND/11 - Fisica Tecnica Ambientalebusiness.industryNegotiationWork (electrical)Risk analysis (engineering)Chemistry (miscellaneous)Order (business)DamagesbusinessGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceJournal of Cultural Heritage
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Towards a genetic history of Sicily

2000

ArcheologyGeographyChemistry (miscellaneous)Materials Science (miscellaneous)ConservationGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceSpectroscopy
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A Late Roman industrial complex with glass furnaces in the northern area of Valencia

2008

Abstract Information from excavations in Conde de Trenor street (1997) and Cisneros square (1986 and 1998) has confirmed that this area situated in the north of Valencia was a river port district dedicated to commercial activities and storing goods during the Roman Imperial period and maybe also in the Republican period. At the end of the third century A.D. the function of these port buildings changed and the evidence suggests that they became industrial workshops. The bases of three circular furnaces were found with fragments of glass containers, bottles, glasses, window panes and some slag. The recent excavation which took place in 2004–2006 in the Palau Cervero , 4 Cisneros square also s…

ArcheologyHistorybiologyMaterials Science (miscellaneous)ExcavationConservationProcesses of changeAncient historybiology.organism_classificationArchaeologyPort (computer networking)Chemistry (miscellaneous)Period (geology)Square (unit)General Economics Econometrics and FinanceShut downValenciaSpectroscopyJournal of Cultural Heritage
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Different methods for soluble salt removal tested on late-Roman cooking ware from a submarine excavation at the island of Pantelleria (Sicily, Italy)

2014

Abstract This paper deals with the comparative evaluation of different procedures of salt extraction designed for archaeological ceramics from submarine burial environments. The experimental work was carried out on a particular type of late-Roman cooking ware finds (Pantellerian ware) found in a shipwreck near the shoreline of the Island of Pantelleria (Sicily). The studied ceramic test-pieces were first recognised in terms of bulk characteristics (mineralogy, petrography and chemistry). SEM-EDS observation allowed verification of the presence of various secondary minerals at the surface and in the pore spaces formed after the prolonged permanence in seawater under oxidising or reducing con…

ArcheologyMaterials Science (miscellaneous)SepioliteMineralogySubmarineExcavationConservationCeramic substratePetrographyArchaeological ceramicsChemistry (miscellaneous)Experimental workSeawaterSubmarine excavation Archaeological ceramic Desalination procedures Pantellerian ware SicilyGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceSpectroscopyGeologySettore GEO/09 -Georis. Miner.e Appl.Mineral.-Petrogr. per l'Ambi.ed i B.Cult.
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Consolidation and protection by nanolime: recent advances for the conservation of the graffiti, Carceri dello Steri Palermo and of the 18th century l…

2014

Abstract Nanolime dispersed in 2-propanol was extensively used for the consolidation of wall paintings. The knowledge of the advances of this methodology dealing with all the possible effects associated with the nanolime new material in conservation is fundamental to assess and improve the technique. In this paper, four different dispersions of Ca(OH) 2 nanoparticles were characterised by Small Angle X-rays Scattering technique (SAXS) and Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) in order to achieve information on size, shape, polydispersity, agglomeration, and crystal structure (by SAED patterns) of the particles. Once characterised, the dispersions were tested in two different case studies, …

ArcheologyMaterials scienceAbsorption of waterConsolidation (soil)Small-angle X-ray scatteringScanning electron microscopeMaterials Science (miscellaneous)DispersityMetallurgyWall paintings conservationNanoparticleConservationNanoscienceChemistry (miscellaneous)Transmission electron microscopyPorous materialsSelected area diffractionComposite materialNanotechnologieGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceSpectroscopyConsolidationNanolimeSettore CHIM/02 - Chimica Fisica
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Characterization of Iranian Moarraque glazes by light microscopy, SEM-EDX and voltammetry of microparticles

2008

Abstract Glazed ceramics have been traditionally used in Iran for decorating mosques and some civil historical buildings. In particular, Moarraque glazes have been extensively used in the indoor and outdoor decoration of mosques in Iran since the middle 14th century. The pieces have a complex elaboration based on a main glazed piece corresponding to the skeleton structure of the Shah Abbasi flower, which contains a number of holes, where are placed, mosaic-like, smaller glazed pieces forming a compact and single tile. The present work describes the analytical study performed on the glazes of several pieces of Moarraque tiles from the Ali Ebn Abi Taleb Mosque (Esfahan, Iran), which date back…

ArcheologyMaterials scienceMaterials Science (miscellaneous)GlazeMetallurgyEnergy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopyMineralogyConservationCharacterization (materials science)Chemistry (miscellaneous)visual_artMicroscopyvisual_art.visual_art_mediumTileGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceSpectroscopyJournal of Cultural Heritage
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EDXRF analysis of blue pigments used in Valencian ceramics from the 14th century to modern times

2006

Abstract EDXRF analyses of cobalt-blue pigments were performed on 73 pieces of Valencian ceramics from the beginning of the 14th century up to the 20th century. In 67 of such samples, the pigment decoration was applied together with a tin opacified lead glaze cover on the clay body. In five samples the pigment was applied on the clay body without a glaze cover. The comparison between EDXRF spectra from coloured and non-coloured areas contains information about the pigment composition. Elements like Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn and As are identified as characteristic of blue pigments; different associations of these elements were found and correlated with the chronology of the samples. The results…

ArcheologyMaterials scienceMaterials Science (miscellaneous)MetallurgyGlazeMineralogyPigment compositionConservationValencianlanguage.human_languagePigmentChemistry (miscellaneous)visual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumlanguageCeramicGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceSpectroscopyJournal of Cultural Heritage
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mtDNA analysis of the human remains buried in the sarcophagus of Federico II

2005

Abstract The sarcophagus containing the remains of Federico II, located in the Cathedral of Palermo (Sicily, Italy), was opened on 1998 to perform a multidisciplinary survey [1]. Next to the remains of Federico II and in close contact with them were laying two other skeletons belonging, according to historical records, to Pietro II di Aragona and to an anonymous person (“The Third Individual”), probably a woman. The bones appeared severely deteriorated. Chemical analysis performed on bone samples excluded that the bodies underwent some kind of embalming process. The analysis of mtDNA from bone samples taken from the three skeletons was successful in only one of the two labs involved. The HV…

ArcheologyMitochondrial DNAMaterials Science (miscellaneous)Context (language use)ConservationBiologyArchaeologyGenealogyBiological materialsAncient DNAChemistry (miscellaneous)Cambridge Reference SequenceSarcophagusGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceClose contactSpectroscopySequence (medicine)PCR DNA fingerprinting mt DNA
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The “recipe” of the stucco sculptures of Giacomo Serpotta

2002

Abstract Mineralogical and chemical data (organic) of some representative samples collected from stucco-works by the famous Sicilian sculptor Giacomo Serpotta (Palermo, 1656–1732) have been combined with the aim of ascertaining their manufacture technology in the light of local historical sources. A complete correspondence between samples belonging to the “Victory” statue (1723) and the S.S. Rosario oratory (1685–1689) as regards stratigraphy, mineralogy of sand aggregate, composition of binder matrix, and nature and concentrations of organic additives is pointed out. Considering that the studied works of art cover more than 35 years of the artist’s activity, it is consequential to think of…

ArcheologySculptureHistoryMaterials Science (miscellaneous)RecipeVictoryConservationArchaeologylanguage.human_languageChemistry (miscellaneous)languageStatueStuccoStratigraphy (archaeology)General Economics Econometrics and FinanceSicilianComposition (language)SpectroscopyJournal of Cultural Heritage
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Deep learning to detect built cultural heritage from satellite imagery. - Spatial distribution and size of vernacular houses in Sumba, Indonesia -

2021

Abstract In Sumba Island – Indonesia, the implantation of vernacular houses, inside and outside traditional villages, is considered to be an efficient proxy for the on-going complex cultural transformations resulting from globalization. This study presents an easily reproducible workflow allowing buildings to be automatically detected from satellite imagery, demonstrating how modern computer vision methods based on deep learning can help in this task, which would be far too time-consuming when undertaken by hand. Eight deep learning architectures based on convolutional neural networks were compared in terms of ability to identify and locate precisely traditional houses from satellite images…

Archeology[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and PrehistoryComputer scienceMaterials Science (miscellaneous)02 engineering and technologyConservationMachine learningcomputer.software_genreConvolutional neural network11. SustainabilityClassifier (linguistics)0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering0601 history and archaeologyArchitectureSpectroscopyComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS060102 archaeologyPoint (typography)business.industryDeep learning06 humanities and the arts[INFO.INFO-GR]Computer Science [cs]/Graphics [cs.GR]Support vector machineCultural heritageWorkflowChemistry (miscellaneous)[INFO.INFO-TI]Computer Science [cs]/Image Processing [eess.IV]020201 artificial intelligence & image processingArtificial intelligencebusinessGeneral Economics Econometrics and Financecomputer
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