Mirco PUCCI / Giorgio VERDIANI
(Dipartimento di Architettura, Firenze, Italy)

Keywords: sarcophagus, 3D modeling, photo-modeling, database, Structure From Motion

Abstract:
The basilica of St. Silvestro, at the catacombs of Priscilla in Rome it’s a recent construction, it was built in the early XX Century, but it was realized over the foundations of a structure developed in different times during the Late Antiquity. It is now at the end of a meaningful restoration. The South-East part of the original building was conceived as a space for burials. Currently this area is used as storage for the archaeological materials found during the excavations of the past century. The new museum of the sculptures will contain 405 pieces of sarcophages dated between the beginning of the III Century a.C. and the first half of the IV Century a.C. One of the most important pieces in this collection is a well preserved marble sarcophagus, dated around the III Century a.C., graven with scenes from the everyday life and from agriculture and sheep-farming activities . This piece is the object of this study, a robust challenge for the digital survey, because of the complex characteristics of the sculptures and their small size details and last but not least the difficulties linked to the light subsurface dispersion of the marble. For these reasons the survey was based on the Structure From Motion process, operating using a digital SLR camera and a specific SFM software. The main vantages of this choice are the reduction of the instrument costs and their practical management: all was done with a good quality camera, a tripod and some studio lights, while a single, middle price, software was used to produce the final digital 3D model. The final results, edited and optimized in different solutions for multimedia presentation and prototyping were soon ready for further usage, like the implementation in the multimedia detail database, right now under development.