antiquarians in the 21st century: opening up our data

12
Antiquarians in the 21st Century: Opening up our data Emma Jane O’Riordan - ScARF Project Manager Erin Osborne Martin- Managing Editor of the Society of Antiquaries 1 TH3-03 : Open Access & Open Data in Archaeology

Upload: ariadnenetwork

Post on 16-Jan-2017

208 views

Category:

Data & Analytics


6 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Antiquarians in the 21st Century: Opening up our data

Antiquarians in the 21st Century: Opening up our data

Emma Jane O’Riordan - ScARF Project ManagerErin Osborne Martin- Managing Editor of the

Society of Antiquaries

1

TH3-03 : Open Access & Open Data in Archaeology

Page 2: Antiquarians in the 21st Century: Opening up our data

2

The Antiquaries: A Brief History

• Founded in 1780 • Incorporated by Royal Charter in 1783• The Society’s purpose is “to investigate both antiquities and natural and civil

history in general, with the intention that the talents of mankind should be cultivated and that the study of natural and useful sciences should be promoted.”

Page 3: Antiquarians in the 21st Century: Opening up our data

3

www.socantscot.org

The Society and the ADS

Page 4: Antiquarians in the 21st Century: Opening up our data

4

www.socantscot.org

Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports

Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports 38 (2009)

Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports 48 (2011)

Gazetteer of Arran Pitchstone Sources: Presentation of exposed pitchstone dykes and sills across the Isle of Arran, and discussion of the archaeological relevance of these outcrops

Aeolian Archaeology: the Archaeology of Sand Landscapes in Scotland: Selected case-studies, originally given as spoken papers at a Society of Antiquaries of Scotland Specialist Seminar, hosted by Historic Scotland, Edinburgh, May 2004

Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports 38 (2009)

Mesolithic and later sites around the Inner Sound, Scotland: the work of the Scotland’s First Settlers project 1998– 2004

Page 5: Antiquarians in the 21st Century: Opening up our data

01/05/2023 [email protected] 5

www.socantscot.org

Society Publications Timeline

1793 – The Proceedings

1982 – First monograph published

1999 – PSAS Scanning

project begins

2001 – First issue of Scottish

Archaeological Internet Reports

Go-Digital Pilot Project

Page 6: Antiquarians in the 21st Century: Opening up our data

6

www.socantscot.org

Moving to Open Access

Print as % of PSAS costs

Printing Distribution Everything else

Page 7: Antiquarians in the 21st Century: Opening up our data

7

www.socantscot.org

That’s great, but…

How do we talk about this to ourFellows?• Benefits for authors• Benefits for researchers• Benefits for the community

Page 8: Antiquarians in the 21st Century: Opening up our data

8

www.socantscot.org

Pilot project

• Out-of-print books (fewer than 30)• Already digitized• Small scale, but also complex content• Creating methodology for future expansion

Page 9: Antiquarians in the 21st Century: Opening up our data

9

www.socantscot.org

What do we need?

• Book/article-level DOIs • Search functionality• Links to CANMORE

Page 10: Antiquarians in the 21st Century: Opening up our data

10

www.socantscot.org

What do we want? (aka: Phases 2 through infinity)

Page 11: Antiquarians in the 21st Century: Opening up our data

11

www.socantscot.org

A book by any other name?Introducing… the Smellie Collection

Page 12: Antiquarians in the 21st Century: Opening up our data

12

Thank you!

[email protected]@socantscot.org

@EKOsborneMartin@ScARFhub

www.scottishheritagehub.com