Published July 16, 2020 | Version 2
Dataset Open

BostonFingerprints2014_PH30_STL(NEW)

  • 1. University of Glasgow
  • 2. University of Arkansas
  • 3. Boston Landmarks Commission
  • 4. Harvard Peabody Museum

Description

SPARC Project: BostonFingerprints_2014
Principle Investigators: Joseph Bagley and Jennifer Poulsen
Contributors: Rachel Opitz (SPARC)

Joseph Bagley and Jennifer Poulsen (Boston Landmarks Commission) and Rachel Opitz (SPARC researcher) used a structured light scanner to create detailed 3D models of ceramic artifacts featuring finger and hand prints from the Parker-Harris Pottery Site and Three Cranes tavern Site in Charlestown, Massachusetts. These sites were excavated in the early- and mid-1980s in advance of Boston’s Big Dig as part of the Central Artery North Area, and are now listed in the National Register of Historic Places as part of the City Square Archaeological District. The Parker-Harris Pottery Site was the location of early coarse earthenware (redware) ceramic production in Boston. It was destroyed on June 17, 1775 by British troops who burned Charlestown as part of the Battle of Bunker Hill. The Three Cranes Tavern was founded in the former Great House of Governor John Winthrop in the center of Charlestown, only 100 meters from the Parker-Harris property. The tavern passed through a series of owners resulting in a near-continual use of the property as a Tavern for 140 years. During archaeological investigation numerous privies and features were identified with tightly-dated ceramic assemblages, including numerous coarse earthenwares with the distinct decorative elements of the Parker or Harris pottery. This project aimed to establish that biometric identifiers directly connect pottery from consumption sites to production sites when there are known sales between production and consumption sites, tightly dated deposits that limit association of pottery to specific potters, and a limited number of potters producing these vessels. This type of research could establish previously-unknown associations and commercial networks of domestic redware potters across the eastern United States. With data as unique and personal as a fingerprint, the results of this analysis brings a personal and evocative light to these significant assemblages, allowing the public to appreciate these forgotten and sometimes nameless potters through the intimate association of their hands.

This project includes raw and processed data captured using a Breuckmann Smartscan HE structured light scanner with 250mm lenses using Optocat 2013 software. Sixty ceramics were scanned - 30 from Parker-Harris Kiln and 30 from Three Cranes Tavern.

This upload contains the processed STL meshes for Parker-Harris 30 specifically (PH30) due to corruption in the file originally uploaded to this archive.

PLEASE NOTE: The original upload of STL files for PH 30 was corrupted. Due to Zenodo's publishing policies, we cannot alter the upload here. If you would like the STL files for PH30, please use this file instead of that in BostonFingerprints2014_ProcessedSTLmeshes
 
Project Name: Boston Fingerprints
Survey Location: City of Boston Archaeology Laboratory
Survey Dates: 20 - 24 October 2014
Scanner Details: Breuckmann Smartscan HE structured light scanner - 250mm lenses
Operator Name: Rachel Opitz
Calibration Files: BostonFingerprints2014_RawData_Calib2
Total Number of Scans: 194
Total Number of STL meshes: 199
Final Datasets for Archive: Raw scan data from Optocat, STL meshes, and images of each ceramic (.pdf)
Images from Survey: 388
Software: Optocat 2013

Files

BostonFingerprint2014_STL_ph30.zip

Files (36.6 MB)

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