Articles by Emanuele Brienza
Rome: NE slopes of the Palatine hill. Archaeology of architecture and ancient masonries deep analysis
Emanuele Brienza, Lorenzo Fornaciari
Abstract
The NE slopes of the Palatine hill and the Colosseum valley area have a long archaeological research history. Here the continuous urban development has produced the overlap of architectural complexes distributed over time. The huge amount of archaeological documents produced by the research is managed within a GIS environment. For the analysis of ancient walls we introduced the use of image-based-modelling photogrammetry in order to create a very detailed 3D documentation linked to a DBMS dedicated to ancient structural features. Through this methodology we can evaluate specific aspects of ancient construction yards for each period. We can also refine the chronological sequences of the architectural structures and verify the contextual relationships of the surrounding buildings in order to formulate wide-ranging reconstructive hypotheses.
«Archeologia e Calcolatori» 2021, 32.2, 177-186; doi: 10.19282/ac.32.2.2021.16
Settlement and viewshed dynamics between the ancient sites of the Erei as a key of historical landscape interpretation
Emanuele Brienza, Massimo Cultraro, Eleonora Draià
Abstract
The inner Sicilian area of the Erei hills, crossed by rivers and important streams directed to the Catania’s lowland, witnessed very ancient human occupation and activities, starting from the Upper Palaeolithic. Here the dynamics of human activities and the organization of the supply basin during early times were distinctive in certain historical periods: some featured a substantial continuity with the earlier phases, while others showed a complete discontinuity with the older human settlement framework and a new organization of the area and activities connected with the environment. These agricultural, proto-urban and urban communities organized their existence on the exploitation of natural resources, distributing themselves according to the local morphology. They built, mostly on top of the hills, constructions used as control viewpoints of the area, and created a complete communication network to connect settlements of the same or different level. Those features in several cases had a long-term continuity that survived to dramatic historical changes and represent today the optimal way for a right perception of current landscape and its millenary history.
«Archeologia e Calcolatori» 2020, 31.2, 199-210; doi: 10.19282/ac.31.2.2020.19
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