Content The ADS holds the digital outputs of numerous archaeological excavations or other research activities including some very well known sites such as
Stonehenge and
Sutton Hoo. Much of the archive material can be grouped together under 'programme' headings such as the
Channel Tunnel Rail Link (CTRL) which involved over 100 different archaeological interventions. The ADS acts as the mandated digital archive for archaeological research, of any kind, funded by the
AHRC, and also for
English Heritage administered funds such as the Aggregates Levy Sustainability Fund (ALSF). The online journal
Internet Archaeology's content is archived by the ADS and a number of journal series from learned societies such as the
Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, have older digital versions of their
journals made freely available from the ADS site. The ADS is the largest single source of archived
grey literature, with over 20,000 examples available in its
Library of Unpublished Fieldwork. Access to grey literature in the archaeological context has become a significant concern, especially in academia, in recent years.
Advice The ADS offer advice to data creators on procedures and formats, including advice on the writing of
Technical Appendices for AHRC applications. The website hosts a series of Guides to Good Practice (G2GP) on the following archaeological topics: •
Geographic information systems • Archiving
aerial photography and
remote sensing data • Digital archives from
excavation and fieldwork •
Geophysical data in archaeology •
CAD • Creating and using
virtual reality, a guide for the arts and humanities All these G2GP were revised in 2012 funded in part by
English Heritage and the US based Digital Antiquity project.
Procedures The ADS archive is intended to follow the
Open Archival Information System reference model, which is an
ISO for data archive systems. There are no constraints on access although users must click a web form to accept the ADS Terms and Conditions, in essence these state that the all copyright is retained by the original data depositor, but they permit its reuse for teaching, learning and research purposes, but not commercial purposes. Off site back-up storage for the ADS archive is held both at the
University of York's computer services and at the
UK Data Archive in Essex.
Interface Beyond acting as a simple repository for datasets, the ADS has a number of interactive interfaces into complex archives including database search interfaces, Web
GIS and interactive image galleries. The main search mechanism for the ADS catalogue, ArchSearch, contains aggregated resource discovery
metadata for the national monument inventories of England, Scotland and
Wales (hosted by
English Heritage, the
RCAHMS and the
RCAHMW) as well as numerous Historic Environment Records
HERs. The ADS hosts a number of datasets, such as the Excavation Index, that are made available externally as
web services and consumed by
English Heritage's Heritage Gateway search engine. ==Projects==