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Reefert Church, Glendalough (turntable movie)
WI023-028001-Situated at the south-east corner of the Upper Lake near Poulanass brook. Reefert Church (from 'Righ Fearta' the burial place of Kings), a possible eleventh-century church, has been extensively restored and consists of a nave (dims. 8.9m E-W; 5.3m N-S) and chancel (dims. 4m E-W; 2.5m N-S) with a simple chancel arch. The W door has inclined jambs and a lintel, both granite. The nave wa…
Creator
- The Discovery Programme
Publisher
- The Discovery Programme
Subject
- National Monuments in State Care
- Church
- archaeological sites
- archaeology
- national monuments
- churches (buildings)
- Archaeological site
- Archaeology
- Church building
Type of item
- Movie
Medium
- Stone
- Stone
Creator
- The Discovery Programme
Publisher
- The Discovery Programme
Subject
- National Monuments in State Care
- Church
- archaeological sites
- archaeology
- national monuments
- churches (buildings)
- Archaeological site
- Archaeology
- Church building
Type of item
- Movie
Medium
- Stone
- Stone
Providing institution
Aggregator
Intermediate provider
Rights statement for the media in this item (unless otherwise specified)
- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Rights
- Copyright © The Discovery Programme
Temporal
- 11th Century AD
Places
- Reefert Church, Glendalough
Provenance
- Close Range Scanning, Glendalough. The Artec EVA scanner is used to generate high resolution models of surfaces with small scale detail. The Artec EVA uses structured light to record. A forensics tent is used to create a controlled lighting environment and ensure measurement can proceed regardless of the weather when used outdoors. Scanning is undertaken with the fastest speed setting (15 frames per second) and with a minimum 400 mm depth of field. The data is recorded with sufficient overlap between scans to ensure easy registration. Resolution 0.5 mmAccuracy 0.1 mmAccuracy over distance 0.03% over 100 cmTexture Resolution 1.3 mpColours 24 bppLight Source flash bulb (no laser)Video frame rate 16 fpsExposure time 0.0002 sPost-processing is done in Artec Studio 9 software: individual scans are edited, aligned, before a final surface is generated using global registration, fusion, and a small objects filter algorithm. If required, a textured surface can also be created. The model is exported from Artec Studio 9 as an .obj file. For dissemination purposes a 3D pdf of the model is generated using Geomagic Studio 2012.
Identifier
- http://3dicons.dcu.gr/object/HA/1293
Extent
- nave: length 8.9 metres
Providing country
- Ireland
Collection name
First time published on Europeana
- 2015-01-28T10:56:49.517Z
Last time updated from providing institution
- 2024-08-19T11:25:33.309Z