Laser scanning at Stonehenge

Laser scanning at Stonehenge

The laser scanning at Stonehenge of the Bronze Age dagger and axes inscribed on the sarsens there was undertaken in 2003 by a team from Wessex Archaeology and [http://www.archaeoptics.co.uk/ Archaeoptics] . They used 3D laser scanning technologies to analyse and record the surfaces of the megaliths at Stonehenge which contain prehistoric and post-medieval carvings. This was the first time laser scanning had been used at Stonehenge.

The Bronze Age carvings of a dagger and an axehead were first discovered by archaeologist Richard Atkinson in 1953 on stone number 53, one of the imposing sarsen trilithons. A contemporary survey in 1956 by Robert Newall revealed that the total number of axes on this stone totalled 14, all on the same face of the stone, looking inwards to the centre of the stone circle. Typologically, the axes have a Middle Bronze Age date.

The surface of stone 53 containing Bronze Age carvings was laser scanned at a resolution of 0.5mm, resulting in hundreds of thousands of individual 3D measurements known as a point cloud. These data were then processed into a meshed 3D solid model for analysis using custom software written by [http://www.archaeoptics.co.uk/ Archaeoptics] called [http://www.archaeoptics.co.uk/products/demon/ Demon3D] .

The team pioneered some visualisation techniques to enhance the outlines of the known carvings. During this process, the faint outline of two previously unknown axes was spotted in an [http://www.stonehengelaserscan.org/animations.html animation] , separate from the carvings recorded by Newall. Subsequent enhancement of the data confirmed that the shapes were of flanged axes, similar in shape to those which are clearly visible, but either badly eroded, or were originally carved much shallower than their counterparts. The larger of the [http://www.stonehengelaserscan.org/stone53/s53newcarvings.html two carvings] differs slightly from the other axes in that it has two 'lugs' along its shaft, and others have interpreted that it could represent either an axe, a mushroom, or a ram's skull.

The results of these investigations were published in the [http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba73/feat1.shtml November 2003] edition of [http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba.html British Archaeology] , and the project website can be visited at http://www.stonehengelaserscan.org/ where animations and interpretations of the data may be viewed.


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