The document discusses collaboration strategies for managing historic environment data in Scotland. It outlines Scotland's Historic Environment Strategy, which takes a collaborative approach across sectors to understand, protect, and value the historic environment. The strategy calls for improved data sharing and open data practices to better inform decision making. Specific initiatives discussed include the Scottish Historic Environment Data strategy to create a shared, linked resource and efforts to engage communities and citizen scientists.
Presentation during the 14th Association of African Universities (AAU) Conference and African Open Science Platform (AOSP)/Research Data Alliance (RDA) Workshop in Accra, Ghana, 7-8 June 2017.
Presentation during the 14th Association of African Universities (AAU) Conference and African Open Science Platform (AOSP)/Research Data Alliance (RDA) Workshop in Accra, Ghana, 7-8 June 2017.
Roger Longhorn, GSDI Secretary-General, Infoter 5 Conference, SES PresentationGSDI Association
Presentation by GSDI Secretary-General, Roger Longhorn, at the Infoter 5 Conference on 6 November in Balatonfured, Hungary, on the Spatially Enabled Society
Presentation during the 14th Association of African Universities (AAU) Conference and African Open Science Platform (AOSP)/Research Data Alliance (RDA) Workshop in Accra, Ghana, 7-8 June 2017.
Presentation during the 14th Association of African Universities (AAU) Conference and African Open Science Platform (AOSP)/Research Data Alliance (RDA) Workshop in Accra, Ghana, 7-8 June 2017.
A presentation given by Peter McKeague (Historic Environment Scotland), Anthony Corns (Discovery Programme, Ireland) and Axel Posluschny (University of Bamberg, Germany) at the European Archaeological Consilium annual meeting in Brighton, March 2015.
Scotland – Ireland Archaeological Collaboration
On the 30th October 2014 Historic Scotland hosted a gathering at Edinburgh Castle. Over 50 archaeologists from Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland gathered together with experts in funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, Scotland Europa, the Heritage Lottery Fund, Resourcing Scotland’s Heritage and Creative Scotland (Creative Europe). There was also a delegate from the Isle of Man. The presentations from the day are on this slideshare.
Rebecca Jones - Head of Archaeology Strategy, Historic Scotland
Scotland – Ireland Archaeological Collaboration
On the 30th October 2014 Historic Scotland hosted a gathering at Edinburgh Castle. Over 50 archaeologists from Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland gathered together with experts in funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, Scotland Europa, the Heritage Lottery Fund, Resourcing Scotland’s Heritage and Creative Scotland (Creative Europe). There was also a delegate from the Isle of Man. The presentations from the day are on this slideshare.
On the 30th October 2014 Historic Scotland hosted a gathering at Edinburgh Castle. Over 50 archaeologists from Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland gathered together with experts in funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, Scotland Europa, the Heritage Lottery Fund, Resourcing Scotland’s Heritage and Creative Scotland (Creative Europe). There was also a delegate from the Isle of Man. The presentations from the day are on this slideshare.
Scotland – Ireland Archaeological Collaboration
On the 30th October 2014 Historic Scotland hosted a gathering at Edinburgh Castle. Over 50 archaeologists from Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland gathered together with experts in funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, Scotland Europa, the Heritage Lottery Fund, Resourcing Scotland’s Heritage and Creative Scotland (Creative Europe). There was also a delegate from the Isle of Man. The presentations from the day are on this slideshare.
A roundtable with Peter McKeague (RCAHMS) and Stefano Campana (McDonald Research Institute, University of Cambridge and the University of Siena) at the Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology conference at the University of Siena on 1st April 2015.
This round table session seeks to build a case for developing a thematic SDI but is thematic SDI even necessary with existing digital infrastructure initiatives – Archaeolandscapes (Arcland), ARIADNE and Europeana – in place? Where are the current initiatives and exemplar projects, particularly for data created through fieldwork and scientific analysis, for harmonising spatial data?
Part of the 21st Annual Meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists (EAA), hosted at the University of Glasgow in September 2015
http://eaaglasgow2015.com/
Presentation on INSPIRE and Higher Education (1 of 2)JISC GECO
Presentation designed to explain the relationship between academic data and the EU INSPIRE Directive. Produced by staff from EDINA and the Digital Curation Centre.
Roger Longhorn, GSDI Secretary-General, Infoter 5 Conference, SES PresentationGSDI Association
Presentation by GSDI Secretary-General, Roger Longhorn, at the Infoter 5 Conference on 6 November in Balatonfured, Hungary, on the Spatially Enabled Society
Presentation during the 14th Association of African Universities (AAU) Conference and African Open Science Platform (AOSP)/Research Data Alliance (RDA) Workshop in Accra, Ghana, 7-8 June 2017.
Presentation during the 14th Association of African Universities (AAU) Conference and African Open Science Platform (AOSP)/Research Data Alliance (RDA) Workshop in Accra, Ghana, 7-8 June 2017.
A presentation given by Peter McKeague (Historic Environment Scotland), Anthony Corns (Discovery Programme, Ireland) and Axel Posluschny (University of Bamberg, Germany) at the European Archaeological Consilium annual meeting in Brighton, March 2015.
Scotland – Ireland Archaeological Collaboration
On the 30th October 2014 Historic Scotland hosted a gathering at Edinburgh Castle. Over 50 archaeologists from Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland gathered together with experts in funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, Scotland Europa, the Heritage Lottery Fund, Resourcing Scotland’s Heritage and Creative Scotland (Creative Europe). There was also a delegate from the Isle of Man. The presentations from the day are on this slideshare.
Rebecca Jones - Head of Archaeology Strategy, Historic Scotland
Scotland – Ireland Archaeological Collaboration
On the 30th October 2014 Historic Scotland hosted a gathering at Edinburgh Castle. Over 50 archaeologists from Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland gathered together with experts in funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, Scotland Europa, the Heritage Lottery Fund, Resourcing Scotland’s Heritage and Creative Scotland (Creative Europe). There was also a delegate from the Isle of Man. The presentations from the day are on this slideshare.
On the 30th October 2014 Historic Scotland hosted a gathering at Edinburgh Castle. Over 50 archaeologists from Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland gathered together with experts in funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, Scotland Europa, the Heritage Lottery Fund, Resourcing Scotland’s Heritage and Creative Scotland (Creative Europe). There was also a delegate from the Isle of Man. The presentations from the day are on this slideshare.
Scotland – Ireland Archaeological Collaboration
On the 30th October 2014 Historic Scotland hosted a gathering at Edinburgh Castle. Over 50 archaeologists from Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland gathered together with experts in funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, Scotland Europa, the Heritage Lottery Fund, Resourcing Scotland’s Heritage and Creative Scotland (Creative Europe). There was also a delegate from the Isle of Man. The presentations from the day are on this slideshare.
A roundtable with Peter McKeague (RCAHMS) and Stefano Campana (McDonald Research Institute, University of Cambridge and the University of Siena) at the Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology conference at the University of Siena on 1st April 2015.
This round table session seeks to build a case for developing a thematic SDI but is thematic SDI even necessary with existing digital infrastructure initiatives – Archaeolandscapes (Arcland), ARIADNE and Europeana – in place? Where are the current initiatives and exemplar projects, particularly for data created through fieldwork and scientific analysis, for harmonising spatial data?
Part of the 21st Annual Meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists (EAA), hosted at the University of Glasgow in September 2015
http://eaaglasgow2015.com/
Presentation on INSPIRE and Higher Education (1 of 2)JISC GECO
Presentation designed to explain the relationship between academic data and the EU INSPIRE Directive. Produced by staff from EDINA and the Digital Curation Centre.
Introduction given at the SHED Forum. This workshop looked at Scotland's Historic Environment Data and at how we can better link, exchange and use data relating to the historic enviroment.
AAG Session
4204 Data-based living: peopling and placing ‘big data
Tampa, Florida, April 11 2014
Tracey P. Lauriault and Rob Kitchin
National Institute for Regional and Spatial Analysis (NIRSA)
National University of Ireland at Maynooth (NUIM)
IOC Data systems and capacity development related to BBNJ, MGR workshop 21-22...wardappeltans
Marine Genetic Resources, Access and Benefit Sharing, Capacity Development and Transfer of Marine Technology, Biodiversity in Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction
Tracey P. Lauriault (Programmable City team)
A genealogy of open data assemblages
Abstract: Evidence informed decision making, participatory public policy, government transparency and accountability, sustainable development, and data driven journalism were the initial drivers of making public data accessible. The access work of geomaticians, researchers, librarians, community developers and journalists has recently been recast as open data that includes a different set of actors. As open data matures as a practice, its principles, definitions and guidelines have been transformed into national performance indicators such as indexes, barometers, ratings and score cards; the private sector such as Gartner, McKinsey, and Deloitte are touting open data's innovation and business opportunities; while smart city initiatives offer tools and expertise to help government sense, monitor, measure and evaluate their cities. Open data today seems to have evolved far from its original ideals, even with civil society players such as Markets for Good, Sunlight Foundation, Open Knowledge Foundation, Code for America, and many others advocating for more social approaches. This talk proposes an assemblage approach to understanding open data and provides a genealogy of its development in different contexts and places.
Bio: Tracey P. Lauriault is a Programmable City Project Postdoctoral Researcher focussing on How are digital data generated and processed about cities and their citizens? She arrives from Canada where she was a researcher with the Geomatics and Cartographic Research Centre, at Carleton University, where she investigated Data, Infrastructures and Geographical Imaginations, spatial data infrastructures, open data and the preservation of and access to research and geomatics data; legal and policy issues associated with geospatial, administrative and civil society data; and cybercartography. She is a a member of the international Research Data Alliance Legal (RDA) Interoperability Working Group, the Natural Resources Canada Roundtable on Geomatics Legal and Policy Interest Group. She is also actively engaged in public policy research as it pertains to open data and their related infrastructures.
UK Research Data Management: overview to ADBU congress, 19 Sep 2013 by Laura ...L Molloy
Research data management in the UK: interventions by the Jisc Managing Research Data programme and the Digital Curation Centre. Specifies the importance of academic librarians for RDM. Includes links to openly available training resources. Presentation by L Molloy to ABDU congress, 19 Sep 2013 in Le Havre.
A presentation from the One Scotland Mapping Agreement annual seminar at Our Dynamic Earth in Edinburgh on 27th October 2015.
Introducing Historic Environment Scotland (HES) and discussing how changes in attitude towards derived data through the Exemption process (and Presumption to Publish) have enabled HES data to be provided as Open Data from the Canmore and PastMap websites.
#1Scotmap
Scotland – Ireland Archaeological Collaboration
On the 30th October 2014 Historic Scotland hosted a gathering at Edinburgh Castle. Over 50 archaeologists from Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland gathered together with experts in funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, Scotland Europa, the Heritage Lottery Fund, Resourcing Scotland’s Heritage and Creative Scotland (Creative Europe). There was also a delegate from the Isle of Man. The presentations from the day are on this slideshare.
Stephen Driscoll - European Association of Archaeologists, Glasgow
Scotland – Ireland Archaeological Collaboration
On the 30th October 2014 Historic Scotland hosted a gathering at Edinburgh Castle. Over 50 archaeologists from Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland gathered together with experts in funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, Scotland Europa, the Heritage Lottery Fund, Resourcing Scotland’s Heritage and Creative Scotland (Creative Europe). There was also a delegate from the Isle of Man. The presentations from the day are on this slideshare.
Dr Sonja Jilek - Institute for History, Vienna University
Scotland – Ireland Archaeological Collaboration
On the 30th October 2014 Historic Scotland hosted a gathering at Edinburgh Castle. Over 50 archaeologists from Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland gathered together with experts in funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, Scotland Europa, the Heritage Lottery Fund, Resourcing Scotland’s Heritage and Creative Scotland (Creative Europe). There was also a delegate from the Isle of Man. The presentations from the day are on this slideshare.
Dr John O’Keeffe - Historic Monuments Unit, Northern Ireland Environment Agency
Scotland – Ireland Archaeological Collaboration
On the 30th October 2014 Historic Scotland hosted a gathering at Edinburgh Castle. Over 50 archaeologists from Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland gathered together with experts in funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, Scotland Europa, the Heritage Lottery Fund, Resourcing Scotland’s Heritage and Creative Scotland (Creative Europe). There was also a delegate from the Isle of Man. The presentations from the day are on this slideshare.
Ann Lynch - The National Monuments Service, Department of Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht, Ireland
"Shared Web Information Systems for Heritage in Scotland and Wales – Flexibility in Partnership"
D. Thomas (RCAHMW) and P. McKeague (RCAHMS)
This presentation was given at the XXIV International CIPA Symposium, 2013 - 'Recording, Documentation and Cooperation for Cultural Heritage'.
The Royal Commissions on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland and Wales were established in 1908 to investigate and record the archaeological and built heritage of their respective countries. The organisations have grown organically over the succeeding century, steadily developing their inventories and collections as card and paper indexes. Computerisation followed in the late 1980s and early 1990s, with RCAHMS releasing Canmore, an online searchable database, in 1998. Following a review of service provision in Wales, RCAHMW entered into partnership with RCAHMS in 2003 to deliver a database for their national inventories and collections. The resultant partnership enables both organisations to develop at their own pace whilst delivering efficiencies through a common experience and a shared IT infrastructure. Through innovative solutions the partnership has also delivered benefits to the wider historic environment community, providing online portals to a range of datasets, ultimately raising public awareness and appreciation of the heritage around them. Now celebrating its 10th year, Shared Web Information Systems for Heritage, or more simply SWISH, continues to underpin the work of both organisations in presenting information about the historic environment to the public.
This presentation was given by Peter McKeague at a workshop at the 4th International Euro-Mediterranean Conference (EuroMed 2012) Conference in Limassol, Cyprus on 'GIS systems and Archaeological Spatial Data Infrastructures in Europe and Mediterranean area.'
INSPIRE provides a roadmap for the publication of metadata, view and download services for a wide range of spatial information in the public sector. This presentation outlines the development of INSPIRE in Scotland to 2012 and how it is being implemented for historic environment data. In most instances the timetabled approach of government organisations focuses on publishing only statutory data under the Protected Sites theme. However the definition of a Protected Site under INSPIRE is much broader recognising that data may be managed through legal or other effective means. That is, Protected Sites do not need to be formally protected through designation legislation as long as they are managed effectively for instance through planning guidance.
RCAHMS has adopted the principles behind INSPIRE to publish information about the wider historic environment and the specialist datasets it curates. However, much archaeological information is created outside the public sector by academia and commercial archaeological companies. There is a need to encourage these primary data creators to contribute to archaeological Spatial Data Infrastructures. Online reporting, through OASIS, offers a potential solution through the systematic reporting of archaeological fieldwork, including specialist remote sensing techniques via online forms. The challenge remains to establish a common infrastructure, agreed terminologies and to encourage the archaeological community to value spatial data.
For over a decade, the Historic Land-use Assessment (HLA) Project – a partnership between Historic Scotland and RCAHMS – has undertaken the challenge of mapping Scotland’s historic landscape character. By 2015 the Project will have delivered 100% coverage and, for the first time, Scotland will have a map providing time-depth. The final stages of this project provide a valuable opportunity for review and reflection, and in this presentation we review where we have got to and think about some possibilities for the future.
Kirsty Millican and Mike Middleton
Computing Applications in Archaeology 2013 (25-28 March)
University of Western Australia
The RCAHMS Review of 2003 reported the impending launch of the ‘Heritage Portal’, a ‘GIS interface’ designed to make available RCAHMS and Historic Scotland datasets. A decade on, the resulting product PastMap is one of many collaborative ventures that make Scottish heritage data available online. Others include direct access to the National Record by heritage professionals from across Scotland, enabling instant sharing and updating of relevant data and provision of information as Web Services. This paper shares the experience of digital partnerships from our perspective as early adopters, focusing particularly on the challenges of moving towards open data.
Susan Hamilton and Peter McKeague
Computing Applications in Archaeology 2013 (25-28 March)
University of Western Australia
Scotland has been innovative in making heritage data available online. The national record Canmore is believed to have been one of the world’s first online monuments records and PastMap is a searchable online GIS portal which brings together over 20 heritage datasets.
However, is simply being ‘online’ enough to make a nation’s heritage data truly available? In the case of Scotland, while it is simple to drill down to individual monuments, it is harder to elucidate general patterns, and familiarity with domestic geographies is an advantage when searching.
Susan Hamilton
Computing Applications in Archaeology 2013 (25-28 March)
University of Western Australia
This paper was presented at the Museums and the Web 2012 conference in San Diego, by Michela Clari of the University of Edinburgh and Philip Graham of RCAHMS.
More from Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland (RCAHMS) (12)
Adjusting primitives for graph : SHORT REPORT / NOTESSubhajit Sahu
Graph algorithms, like PageRank Compressed Sparse Row (CSR) is an adjacency-list based graph representation that is
Multiply with different modes (map)
1. Performance of sequential execution based vs OpenMP based vector multiply.
2. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector multiply.
Sum with different storage types (reduce)
1. Performance of vector element sum using float vs bfloat16 as the storage type.
Sum with different modes (reduce)
1. Performance of sequential execution based vs OpenMP based vector element sum.
2. Performance of memcpy vs in-place based CUDA based vector element sum.
3. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (memcpy).
4. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (in-place).
Sum with in-place strategies of CUDA mode (reduce)
1. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (in-place).
As Europe's leading economic powerhouse and the fourth-largest hashtag#economy globally, Germany stands at the forefront of innovation and industrial might. Renowned for its precision engineering and high-tech sectors, Germany's economic structure is heavily supported by a robust service industry, accounting for approximately 68% of its GDP. This economic clout and strategic geopolitical stance position Germany as a focal point in the global cyber threat landscape.
In the face of escalating global tensions, particularly those emanating from geopolitical disputes with nations like hashtag#Russia and hashtag#China, hashtag#Germany has witnessed a significant uptick in targeted cyber operations. Our analysis indicates a marked increase in hashtag#cyberattack sophistication aimed at critical infrastructure and key industrial sectors. These attacks range from ransomware campaigns to hashtag#AdvancedPersistentThreats (hashtag#APTs), threatening national security and business integrity.
🔑 Key findings include:
🔍 Increased frequency and complexity of cyber threats.
🔍 Escalation of state-sponsored and criminally motivated cyber operations.
🔍 Active dark web exchanges of malicious tools and tactics.
Our comprehensive report delves into these challenges, using a blend of open-source and proprietary data collection techniques. By monitoring activity on critical networks and analyzing attack patterns, our team provides a detailed overview of the threats facing German entities.
This report aims to equip stakeholders across public and private sectors with the knowledge to enhance their defensive strategies, reduce exposure to cyber risks, and reinforce Germany's resilience against cyber threats.
1. Tomorrow’s Standards Together
Tomorrow’s Standards Together
Kirsty Lingstadt and Peter McKeague
Kirsty.Lingstadt@rcahms.gov.uk Peter.mckeague@rcahms.gov.uk
Towards a Collaborative Strategy for sector information management (TACOS) University of York 14 May 2014
2. Scotland’s historic environment plays an important part in all our lives. It provides a link
to the past and helps shape our cultural identity. Therefore, it is crucial that we ensure
that it is managed, promoted and preserved for the generations to come.
Stewart Maxwell, MSP
Convener, Education and Culture Committee, Scottish Parliament
(http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/newsandmediacentre/74122.aspx)
The Strategy does not belong to government or any particular sector – it is for everyone
and we can all play a part in helping to ensure it delivers positive outcomes for our
historic environment.
Delivering the Strategy, however, will require the commitment and enthusiasm of
everyone – from academics and professionals with specialist knowledge and skills,
through all aspects of local and national government, to individuals and communities
taking an interest in their local historic environment.
Fiona Hyslop MSP
Cabinet Secretary for Culture and External Affairs
(http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2014/03/8522)
The Historic Environment Strategy for Scotland
4. The Historic Environment Strategy for Scotland
• Cross-cutting
Understanding – By investigating and
recording our historic environment to
continually develop our knowledge,
understanding and interpretation of our
past and how best to conserve, sustain
and present it.
Protecting – By caring for and
protecting the historic environment,
ensuring that we can both enjoy and
benefit from it and conserve and enhance
it for the enjoyment and benefit of future
generations.
Valuing – By sharing and celebrating
the richness and significance of our
historic environment, enabling us to enjoy
the fascinating and inspirational diversity
of our heritage.
Delivered through collaborative approaches
5. The Historic Environment Strategy for Scotland
To ensure that the cultural, social,
environmental and economic value of
our heritage continues to make a major
contribution to the nation’s wellbeing.
Decision making in relation to the care
and management of the historic
environment should be informed by the
best available evidence, supported
by robust data.
Enhance participation through encouraging
greater access to and interpretation and
understanding of the significance of the
historic environment.
7. Scottish Historic Environment Data (SHED) Strategy
Scotland’s Historic Environment Data is the collaborative national public
information resource for the historic environment. This joint venture
between local and national bodies comprises shared and linked digital
records. It will be professionally managed, continually updated, and
accessible to all, ensuring the greatest economic, social and cultural benefits
for the people of Scotland and beyond.
Vision Statement
SMR Forum, August 2012
WORKING TOGETHER TO DELIVER BETTER
HERITAGE INFORMATION
11. INSPIRE
Directive
One Scotland, One Geography
INSPIRE (Scotland)
Statutory Instrument
Cookbook 1 How to serve a Scottish SDI
and INSPIRE compliant WMS
Annex I & II
Metadata
Annex III Metadata,
View & Download
Newly collected
Annex I data
conforms to IR
Newly collected
Annex II & III
data conforms to IR
All existing Annex II
& III data conforms to IR
All existing Annex I
data conforms to IR
INSPIRE: Spatial Data Standards
Operational Guide
UK Location Download Service
IR: Implementation roadmap
2004
2007
2009 2010 2013
20122010 2011
Annex I & II
View
2015 2017 2020
INSPIRE roadmap
Historic Scotland & RCAHMS
Metadata and View services
12. Understanding spatial extents
Organisation Historic
Scotland
SMRs/HERs RCAHMS Fieldwork
What are we
Mapping?
Designation The Potential The Known Activities
(Constraint
Mapping)
(Trigger
Mapping)
(Inventory
Mapping)
(Events and
interpretation)
Further reading:
Mike Middleton (2010) Polygonisation The Shape of things to come
What are the needs for Scottish polygonised Historic Environment Data?
13. Geophysical Survey
Extents
Marine remote
sensing
Field Survey mapping 3D laser scanning
landscape
Geophysical Survey
plots
Lidar Excavation extents
and details
3D laser scanning
Standing structures
But what about all the other information we create?
14. OASIS: 10 years of online collaboration
Fieldwork
Planning
Application
Archaeological
condition
Number of records Number signed off Grey literature reports
England (2004) 37,874 22,106 16,126
Scotland (2007) 3,343 2,098 1,749
Total 41,217 24,204 (58.7%) 17,875
OASIS ArchSearch ADS Grey literature library
Publication
15. OASIS: but it enables so much more!
Online
archiving
Geophysical
Survey
Database
Web services Web services
OAI-PMH
16. OASIS: but it enables so much more!
Online
archiving
Geophysical
Survey
Database
Web services Web services
OAI-PMH
Aggregated datasets
Spatial datasets
17. The Voluntary Sector or Citizen Science
MyCanmore
Since 2008 Canmore users may
upload comments and images to
Canmore records.
Scotland’s Rural Past (2006-11)
Five year partnership between
RCAHMS and community groups to
record Scotland’s historic rural
settlements.
• Over 60 community led projects
• Guidance on field methodology
and standards:
A Practical Guide to Recording Archaeological Sites
Britain From Above
Collaborative Project between
English Heritage, RCAHMS and
RCAHMW to put online the
Aerofilms collection of aerial
photographs from 1919-1953.
Uses Citizen Science to help
identify unlocated images and
share memories36,595 images and
2,161 comments added
18. The G8 Charter for Open Data
1. Public data policy and practice will be clearly driven by the public and businesses that want and use the data, including what data is released
when and in what form.
2. Public data will be published in reusable, machine-readable form.
3. Public data will be released under the same open licence which enables free reuse, including commercial reuse.
4. Public data will be available and easy to find through a single, easy-to use, online access point (data.gov.uk).
5. Public data will be published using open standards, and following relevant recommendations of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C).
6. Public data from different departments about the same subject will be published in the same, standard formats and with the same
definitions.
7. Public data underlying the Government’s own websites will be published in reusable form.
8. Public data will be timely and fine-grained.
9. Release data quickly, and then work to make sure that it is available in open standard formats, including linked data forms.
10. Public data will be freely available to use in any lawful way.
11. Public data will be available without application or registration, and without requiring details of the user.
12. Public bodies should actively encourage the reuse of their public data.
13. Public bodies should maintain and publish inventories of their data holdings.
Public bodies should publish relevant metadata about their datasets and this should be available through a single online access point; and they should
publish supporting descriptions of the format provenance and meaning of the data
Discoverable Useable Understandable
UK Government Public Data Principles (2012)
G8 Open Data Charter and Technical Annex
G8 Open Data Charter UK Action Plan 2013
Scotland’s Digital Future A Strategy for Scotland
19. Examples
Licensed data http://hla.rcahms.gov.uk/ End-user licence to download (OS IPR)
Images (through online sales system)
Data (through online sales system)
On the Internet but with
opaque licencing
http://canmore.rcahms.gov.uk
http://Pastmap.org.uk
Archives: Digital files, Screen resolution images
on the internet with an
Open Licence
machine readable but
proprietary format
non-proprietary format Limited data available as csv download from PastMap under an
Open Government Licence acknowledging OS IPR
Open standards based
(URIs)
linked open standards
data
Three key vocabularies (Monument type, Objects and Maritime
craft) published on http://heritagedata.org
Five Star data - how do we measure up?
We need to do more!
20. Big Data
Some excuses for ‘Data Hugging’
• The data is wrong - and people will tell us the data is wrong - Citizen Science will help refine our data
• People will misunderstand the data and draw wrong conclusions without understanding the context of
the data - Historic Environment data can be difficult but it is our responsibility to publish usable data and
inform people about its use and limitations
• You are giving away my research - research is built upon data (often gathered at public expense) access
to data helps inform research and challenge conclusions
• There is a cost involved in making data available - we place a low value on heritage when the real priority
should be promoting the historic environment and cultural heritage
There is an exponential growth and availability of data
- in both structured and unstructured formats.
- but we still keep data in silos
21. Benefits of a Linked Open Data approach
The Lewis Chessmen
Collection split between the National Museum Scotland and the British Museum
22. Biab and Historic Environment Records
british and irish archaeological bibliography
provides bibliographic references - many with abstracts - covering
all aspects of archaeology and the historic environment, and
every chronological period, with a geographical focus on Britain
and Ireland.
There are almost 200,000 references from over three centuries of
scholarship - with over 1,500 new records added each year.
It complements and enhances the information in record systems –
but we don’t talk to each other!
A query came up as to whether HERs regularly trawl through national journals (e.g. Journal of Roman
Studies, Vernacular Architecture, Industrial Archaeology Review etc) for sites and research relevant to
their geographical area. I was wondering whether list members had a view on the usefulness and
priority level this type of type of research.
Martin Newman, HERforum, 26 September 2008
Few HERs have the resources to have the complete gamut of national journals and about as many of
those you run HERs would have the time to examine them all…
Chris Wardle, HERforum, 26 September 2008
We don't routinely do this, but have been considering it as a part of the HER backlog….
Nick Boldrini, HERforum, 29 September 2008
23. Conclusions
High level strategy - Our Place in Time recognises the need to collaborate
Success stories
• OASIS
• PastMap
Innovative projects
• Engaging Community Groups
• Harnessing the potential of Citizen Science
External drivers towards further collaboration and standards
• INSPIRE Directive - Spatial data standards
• Open Data
To deliver Accessible Historic Environment Data
24. Tomorrow’s Standards Together
Tomorrow’s Standards Together
Kirsty Lingstadt and Peter McKeague
Kirsty.Lingstadt@rcahms.gov.uk Peter.mckeague@rcahms.gov.uk
Towards a Collaborative Strategy for sector information management (TACOS) University of York 14 May 2014
Editor's Notes
‘Team Scotland’ approach to delivery of the StrategyAnd underlying all of this that Culture has an intrinsic value not just an economic value and is therefore of importance to .... Talbot Rice Speech ref
Scotland’s historic environment is intrinsic to our sense of place and strong cultural identity. It is diverse, but collectively it tells the story of our shared past. It is important in its own terms, providing key evidence of the lives and creativity of our forebears. It also helps to create a sense of place, identity and physical and social wellbeing, and benefits the economy, civic participation, tourism and lifelong learning. It is dynamic and ever-changing and that dynamism lies at the heartof the need for sound principles of stewardship. For the people of Scotland to continue to gain real, and increasing, benefits from their historicenvironment, it needs to be understood, valued and championed.Ultimately, we will know we have succeeded when that value is widely realised and we have broadened the profile and people’s understanding of whatheritage can deliver socially, environmentally and economically. We know some actions will require a long term approach. That is why the Strategy hasbeen framed as a ten year plan.
Scotland’s historic environment is understood and valued, cared for and protected, enjoyed and enhanced. It is at the heart of a flourishing and sustainable Scotland and will be passed on with pride to benefit future generations.This vision is underpinned by a series of high level aims, together with the rationale for their importance and an outline for delivery.AIMSWe will realise this shared vision by:• Understanding – By investigating and recording our historic environment to continually develop our knowledge, understanding and interpretation of our past and how best to conserve, sustain and present it. Proper understanding of the value means having the right information to assist decision making, authoratative, up-to date and open• Protecting – By caring for and protecting the historic environment, ensuring that we can both enjoy and benefit from it and conserve and enhance it for the enjoyment and benefit of future generations.• Valuing – By sharing and celebrating the richness and significance of our historic environment, enabling us to enjoy the fascinating and inspirational diversity of our heritage.WHY?We will do this because it will help ensure that the cultural, social, environmentaland economic value of our heritage continues to make a major contribution tothe nation’s wellbeing.HOW?require the range of bodies, groups and individuals with an interest in, or responsibility for, aspects of the historic environment to work together towards a common purpose. Effective use must be made of the skills, experience and resources of all parties, to realise the valuesDecision making informed based on evidence - robust data at the heart of decision makingLeadership and collaboration - resourcesSkills and capacity Mainstreaming
In order to share and celebrate our historic environment as widely as possible we must continue to build on our successes to date and find new and innovativeways of interpreting and presenting our heritage to the people of Scotland and beyond. Encouraging wide-ranging access and adopting a broad learning and engagement approach to growing understanding and promoting active participation will help deliver this key aim. We want to see people value the historic environment as an important community resource.Access and interpretation can only be developed on knowledge and the dissemination of that knowledge therefore, we need to look at new ways in which we can provide information and also how we deliver that information.Knowledge helps create understanding and appreciationMeasuring Success - Developing a strong evidence base for such a diverse sector is challenging. Although individual organisations may construct their own performancemeasurement frameworks, there is an opportunity to enhance the evidence base for the sector as a whole by developing a transparent and consistent basis to assess resources, activities, outcomes and ultimately, impacts.
The SHED Strategy is a sector-wide initiative to improve access to information about Scotland’s historic environment. The key aim is to work in partnership in order to protect, promote and enhance Scotland’s historic environment through coordinated activity to improve the data, and the associated systems and processes. The partnership includes government agencies, non-government organisations (NGOs), and academic institutions, but also supports the public’s involvement in the care and enjoyment of the historic environment through better records. The initiative is an example of a complicated and diverse sector coming together to agree and deliver benefits to a wide audience.
‘the physical evidence for human activity that connects people with place, linked with the associations we can see, feel and understand’ (Scottish Government 2014,2). 1.3 Scotland’s Historic Environment Data plays a key role in a wide range of activities. From providing people with evidence for planning decisions, to helping school children understand and value their environment, SHED provides a living record for all. 1.4 This Strategy echoes the significance that society places on cultural heritage. SHED helps us interpret our surroundings, gives us a place to record our knowledge, and to share it with others. 1.5 The aims and objectives of the Strategy result from collecting and analysing views from creators, curators and users of data. The Strategy looks to address those issues and the wider needs of current and future users of the digital dataScotland’s Historic Environment Data is the digital information about our physical historic environment plus related information on archives, objects and intangible cultural heritage. Together this informs the management, study and interpretation of the historic environment from the earliest times to the present day. 2.3 The purpose of the Strategy is to enhance Scotland’s Historic Environment Data, to address long-standing issues highlighted by users and curators, and to ensure the long-term sustainability
The implementation will be overseen by the SHED Programme Board with representation of data curators and users from the sector. The constituency of that Board will be actively broadened, especially to include representatives of the built heritage conservation sector, museums, archives and education
The implementation will be overseen by the SHED Programme Board with representation of data curators and users from the sector. The constituency of that Board will be actively broadened, especially to include representatives of the built heritage conservation sector, museums, archives and educatio
We already make information available through Web Portals but we need to make data much more accessible. This is particularly true for spatial information which is, or rather should be covered by the Infrastructure for Spatial Information in the European Community – or more simply INSPIRE.INSPIRE provides a clear mandate for public bodies to share environmental data through a Spatial Data Infrastructure (SDI).Data curators are required to provide discovery services, WMS, WFS and Transposition Services for a range of datasets organised into 34 themes in 3 annexes to an agreed roadmap – or timetable. In Scotland, both the Royal Commission and Historic Scotland have published metadata and view services for their key datasets as part of the Protected Places theme. However, the status of undesignated assets is less clear in INSPIRE with the UK Location advice to treat Historic Environment Records as part of the annex III Buildings theme – even though this is an ill fit for much of the data.
As a sector we have already been collaborating online very effectively for over 10 years through the OASIS application hosted by the ADS. Through an online form, OASIS provides a standards driven environment managing information flow from those creating knowledge through fieldwork –including site reports, to relevant data managers in local authority HERs and the national agencies (EH and RCAHMS) who validate and can update their records. After national sign-off information is passed to the ADS for inclusion on ArchSearch with the grey literature also discoverable through the ADS Library. Data collected through OASIS can provide the attribution for project boundary files that may be uploaded through the system. Launched in England ten years ago and adopted in Scotland in 2007, there are now over 40,000 records working their way through the system with over 22,000 records signed off by English Heritage and over 2,000 for Scotland. Of the nearly 26,000 reports available through the Grey literature library 17,875 were delivered through OASIS. They are visible and freely accessible to all. Without OASIS, many would be lost.
But the data gathered through OASIS works harder. In England, the OASIS form gathers metadata essential to document geophysical survey and published it through the ADS Geophysical Survey database and provides metadata to accompany digital archive uploaded through ADSEasy. In Scotland web services from the ADS help prepopulate the Online Radiocarbon application form developed in partnership with RCAHMS and Historic Scotland to capture the information flow for radiocarbon determinations commissioned by Historic Scotland. They will also provide information to Archaeology Scotland’s online Discovery and Excavation in Scotland. In both cases recycling information already gathered to help reduce data entry duplication.
For the marine environment the Marine Environmental Data and Information Network uses OAI-PMH (The Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting) to collect metadata from relevant records in OASIS and publishes these through their own metadata registry which in turn feeds into Data.gov.uk.Aggregated information gathered through the radiocarbon and DES are aggregated into the national record - Canmore . and metadata and view services for the spatial resource are then published through the SSDI, with a copy to MEDIN, The SSDI data is then harvested by data.gov.uk and onto the INSPIRE Registry.
In June 2013 the G8 countries adopted the Open Data Charter which acknowledges the enormous potential that Open Data offers to create more accountable, efficient, responsive and effective governments and businesses, and to spur economic growth. The UK Government also has identified 13 Public Data Principles Public data will be published in reusable, machine readable form Public Data should be released under the same open licence which enables free reuse, INCLUDING commercial reuse Public Data should be available in any lawful way and that Public bodies should actively encourage its reuse.Basically data should be discoverable (through data.gov.uk), it should be useable (both in machine readable form and for the human eye) and it should be understandable (machine readable formats will help here but we need to document the nuances of the data for remote users).
Many here will be familiar with Sir Tim Berners Lee five star open data - but how do we measure up? Taking RCAHMS data as an example, Our Historic Landuse Assessment data is available to browse online and may be downloaded – though only under a non-commercial end-user licence as it shares IPR with the OS map background.Otherwise most of the rest of our data is available online though the exact terms of use are not explicitly clear. It certainly does not conform to one star data.2 star data We currently do not make digital files in proprietary format available for download.3 star data limited data is available for download from PastMap under an OGL acknowledging OS IPR 4 star data – currently none5 star data Thee key vocabularies published through the SENESCHAL project on the heritagedata.org website.
Even without drivers for Open Data, we are facing an exponential growth and availability of data – in both structured and unstructured formats but we still keep data in silos. Open Data should present fantastic opportunities for innovative solutions to long standing challenges of breaking down data silos hiding behind excuses that the data is wrong – Citizen science helps refine and update our dataIt is complex – then we need to do more to help people understand its limitationsYou are giving away my research – the research is knowledge built on the data There is a cost involved – we place a low threshold on heritage
By way of illustration, the Lewis Chessmen provide a good example of the potential offered by 5 Star Linked Open Data. Found in 1831, information about the findspot may be found on Canmore whilst the collection of 78 chess pieces, 14 tablemen and a buckle were dispersed between the National Museum in Edinburgh and the British Museum. The NMS website presents an accessible summary of the hoard, whilst the British Museum has published detailed catalogue records for each piece it curates. Significantly the British Museum has published the collection data in the W3C open data standard, RDF, allowing it to join and relate to a growing body of linked data published by organisations around the world. Potentially, the data could be mashed-up with other Llnked Data for innovative uses beyond the immediate remit of the host institution. So Linked data records for the chessmen could be mased up with Canmore data to present an holistic record of the findspot and each item.
Or take the British and Irish archaeological bibliography – an online database of over 200,000 bibliographic references- with over 1,500 new records added each year - covering all aspects of archaeology and the historic environment . It complements and enhances the information in record systems in the national agencies and LA HERs.Publishing as Linked Open Data would address resourcing and potential duplication of efforts amongst national and local curators, with reciprocal data potentially adding value to Biab records.
So we already have a strong record in collaboration – through OASIS and PastMapwhilst innovative projects such as Scotland Rural Past or Britain from Above can tap the knowledge of Citizen Science to enhance our records.and external drivers can encourage further collaboration across the sector to deliver something that is much greater than the sum of its parts.