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Underwater reflectance transformation imaging: a technology for in situ underwater cultural heritage object-level recording

Underwater reflectance transformation imaging: a technology for in situ underwater cultural heritage object-level recording
Underwater reflectance transformation imaging: a technology for in situ underwater cultural heritage object-level recording
There is an increasing demand for high-resolution recording of in situ underwater cultural heritage. Reflectance transformation imaging (RTI) has a proven track record in terrestrial contexts for acquiring high-resolution diagnostic data at small scales. The research presented here documents the first adaptation of RTI protocols to the subaquatic environment, with a scuba-deployable method designed around affordable off-the-shelf technologies. Underwater RTI (URTI) was used to capture detail from historic shipwrecks in both the Solent and the western Mediterranean. Results show that URTI can capture submillimeter levels of qualitative diagnostic detail from in situ archaeological material. In addition, this paper presents the results of experiments to explore the impact of turbidity on URTI. For this purpose, a prototype fixed-lighting semisubmersible RTI photography dome was constructed to allow collection of data under controlled conditions. The signal-to-noise data generated reveals that the RGB channels of underwater digital images captured in progressive turbidity degraded faster than URTI object geometry calculated from them. URTI is shown to be capable of providing analytically useful object-level detail in conditions that would render ordinary underwater photography of limited use.
imaging , RTI, Archaeology, underwater, cultural heritage, turbidity, polynomial texture mapping, maritime archaeology
1017-9909
Selmo, David
78235f67-0c00-462b-8b02-084578459ad5
Sturt, Fraser
442e14e1-136f-4159-bd8e-b002bf6b95f6
Miles, James, Edward
ffac2ce7-0180-4d1e-a6ff-3957fdcc67a0
Basford, Philip
efd8fbec-4a5f-4914-bf29-885b7f4677a7
Malzbender, Tom
b0a29d2b-8df5-42bc-acc5-638acc92d9ef
Martinez, Kirk
5f711898-20fc-410e-a007-837d8c57cb18
Thompson, Charlie
2a304aa6-761e-4d99-b227-cedb67129bfb
Earl, Graeme
724c73ef-c3dd-4e4f-a7f5-0557e81f8326
Bevan, George
a2729c80-b25c-48db-811f-07a3d7c8df7a
Selmo, David
78235f67-0c00-462b-8b02-084578459ad5
Sturt, Fraser
442e14e1-136f-4159-bd8e-b002bf6b95f6
Miles, James, Edward
ffac2ce7-0180-4d1e-a6ff-3957fdcc67a0
Basford, Philip
efd8fbec-4a5f-4914-bf29-885b7f4677a7
Malzbender, Tom
b0a29d2b-8df5-42bc-acc5-638acc92d9ef
Martinez, Kirk
5f711898-20fc-410e-a007-837d8c57cb18
Thompson, Charlie
2a304aa6-761e-4d99-b227-cedb67129bfb
Earl, Graeme
724c73ef-c3dd-4e4f-a7f5-0557e81f8326
Bevan, George
a2729c80-b25c-48db-811f-07a3d7c8df7a

Selmo, David, Sturt, Fraser, Miles, James, Edward, Basford, Philip, Malzbender, Tom, Martinez, Kirk, Thompson, Charlie, Earl, Graeme and Bevan, George (2017) Underwater reflectance transformation imaging: a technology for in situ underwater cultural heritage object-level recording. Journal of Electronic Imaging, 26 (1), [011029]. (doi:10.1117/1.JEI.26.1.011029).

Record type: Article

Abstract

There is an increasing demand for high-resolution recording of in situ underwater cultural heritage. Reflectance transformation imaging (RTI) has a proven track record in terrestrial contexts for acquiring high-resolution diagnostic data at small scales. The research presented here documents the first adaptation of RTI protocols to the subaquatic environment, with a scuba-deployable method designed around affordable off-the-shelf technologies. Underwater RTI (URTI) was used to capture detail from historic shipwrecks in both the Solent and the western Mediterranean. Results show that URTI can capture submillimeter levels of qualitative diagnostic detail from in situ archaeological material. In addition, this paper presents the results of experiments to explore the impact of turbidity on URTI. For this purpose, a prototype fixed-lighting semisubmersible RTI photography dome was constructed to allow collection of data under controlled conditions. The signal-to-noise data generated reveals that the RGB channels of underwater digital images captured in progressive turbidity degraded faster than URTI object geometry calculated from them. URTI is shown to be capable of providing analytically useful object-level detail in conditions that would render ordinary underwater photography of limited use.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 2 February 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 February 2017
Published date: February 2017
Additional Information: Related to the paper: Archaeological applications of polynomial texture mapping: analysis, conservation and representation
Keywords: imaging , RTI, Archaeology, underwater, cultural heritage, turbidity, polynomial texture mapping, maritime archaeology
Organisations: Geology & Geophysics, Ocean & Earth Science Technical, Web & Internet Science, EEE, Archaeology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 407650
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/407650
ISSN: 1017-9909
PURE UUID: 7df019c5-aae3-4729-a72c-3409f9f343ed
ORCID for Fraser Sturt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3010-990X
ORCID for Philip Basford: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6058-8270
ORCID for Kirk Martinez: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3859-5700
ORCID for Charlie Thompson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1105-6838
ORCID for Graeme Earl: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9077-4605

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Date deposited: 16 Apr 2017 17:09
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:06

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Contributors

Author: David Selmo
Author: Fraser Sturt ORCID iD
Author: James, Edward Miles
Author: Philip Basford ORCID iD
Author: Tom Malzbender
Author: Kirk Martinez ORCID iD
Author: Graeme Earl ORCID iD
Author: George Bevan

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