London: John Baker, 1973. — xiv, 109 p. — ISBN: 212-98422-5. Photography in archaeology differs from the practice of most other branches in that its aim is the presentation of the facts with complete accuracy, but also as strikingly and vividly as possible. Techniques used to achieve this object, which is often extremely difficult, are clearly set out and explained by Mrs...
Cambridge University Press, 1995. — 282 p. This book describes the use and methods of photography in field archaeology, surveys, conservation and archaeological laboratories. This second edition deals with a number of new materials and types of equipment, particularly the growing use of video and electronic recording systems.
Albuquerque: The University of New Mexico Press, 1975. — xxiv, 380 p. — (School of American Research Advanced Seminar Series). — ISBN 0-8263-0376-5. Foreword (Douglas W. Schwartz, General Editor). General Purposes. The Objectives of Archaeological Photography (Elmer Harp, Jr.). Sensitive Materials, Photographic Equipment, and Permanence of the Photographic Record (Martin L....
Claire L. Lyons, John K. Papadopoulos, Lindsey S. Stewart, and Andrew Szegedy-Maszak. — Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2005. — 240 p. The invention of the daguerreotype and calotype processes fundamentally changed scholarly and aesthetic approaches to the past. The accuracy and immediacy of photographs gave scientists a new means to document and study ancient architecture,...
London: The Council for British Archaeology, 1983. — ix, 150 p. — (CBA Research Report No. 49). — ISBN 0-906780-24-1. Dedication (Graham Webster). Editorial preface (G.S. Maxwell). A survey of current air reconnaissance: the achievement, the failure (J. Pickering). The results of air and ground survey of Bodmin Moor, Cornwall (N.D. Johnson). Aerial photography and fieldwork in...
Routledge, 2019. — 264 p. This is the first volume to explore the place of photography in archaeology: the parallel histories of the two fields, their similarities and differences, and their current and future relationships. Since its earliest beginnings, photography has been innately archaeological. Its ability to freeze a moment of time gives photographic images an uncanny...
Routledge, 2019. — 264 p. This is the first volume to explore the place of photography in archaeology: the parallel histories of the two fields, their similarities and differences, and their current and future relationships. Since its earliest beginnings, photography has been innately archaeological. Its ability to freeze a moment of time gives photographic images an uncanny...
London: The Council for British Archaeology, 1975. — ix, 158 p. — (CBA Research Report No. 12). — ISBN 0-900312-29-7. Papers given at a symposium held at Fortress House, London, on 2, 3, and 4 April 1974. Foreword (Professor Glyn Daniel). Preface (Dr Graham Webster). Resolutions of the Symposium. The Organizing Committee. Techniques of Remote Sensing and Survey. Soil and crop...
New York: St. Martin's Press, 1982. — 212 p. — ISBN 0-312-01527-5. Air-Photography and Archaeology. Development of air-photography for archaeology. Putting the photographs to use. Photo-interpretation. Different types of photograph and where to find them. The Nature of the Evidence. Features in relief. Marks in bare soil. Crop-marks. Soil-marks and crop-marks compared....
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