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A Whiter Shade of Grey: a new approach to archaeological grey literature using the XML version of the TEI Guidelines.
Gail Falkingham
Table of Contents
Section 1: Grey Literature Explored
- 1.1 The definition of grey literature
- 1.2 The importance of grey literature
- 1.3 The inaccessibility of grey literature
- 1.4 Grey literature in archaeology
- 1.5 The nature of archaeological grey literature reports
- 1.6 The importance of archaeological grey literature
- 1.7 Inaccessibility and the 'research gap'
- 1.8 Calls for wider circulation and new methods of publication
- 1.9 Overview
Section 2: Making Grey Literature Accessible
- 2.1 Electronic dissemination
- 2.1.1 Grey literature on the World Wide Web
- 2.1.2 Archaeological grey literature on the World Wide Web
- 2.2 Issues of accessibility
- 2.3 Factors influencing the availability of archaeological grey literature
- 2.3.1 Security and confidentiality
- 2.3.2 Freedom of Information, Environmental Information Regulations and eGovernment
- 2.3.3 Intellectual Property Rights and copyright
- 2.3.4 The views of commercial archaeological organisations
- 2.4 Accessibility of grey literature report content to users
- 2.5 Interoperability
- 2.6 Aspects of short and long-term accessibility: preservation and archiving
- 2.7 Electronic document formats and media: delivery, dissemination and preservation
- 2.7.1 Overview of electronic document formats
- 2.7.2 Digitisation of non-digital reports
- 2.8 How accessible really is online access?
- 2.8.1 Computer usage and Internet access in the UK
- 2.8.2 Resource discovery
- 2.9 Overview
Section 3: Introducing The Extensible Markup Language and Related Technologies
- 3.1 XML and markup
- 3.2 The advantages and disadvantages of XML encoding
- 3.3 The Text Encoding Initiative and the XML version of the TEI Guidelines (TEI P4)
- 3.3.1 Advantages and disadvantages of using the TEI Guidelines for document markup
- 3.3.2 XML editors
- 3.4 Web browsers and parsing
- 3.4.1 Client-side versus server-side processing
- 3.5 Displaying, styling and transforming XML documents
- 3.5.1 Cascading Stylesheets (CSS)
- 3.5.2 The eXtensible Stylesheet Language (XSL)
- 3.5.3 The XML Linking Language (XLink)
- 3.5.4 Other XML languages
- 3.5.4.1 The Wireless Markup Language (WML)
- 3.5.4.2 Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG)
- 3.5.5 The future of XML technology
- 3.6 Current uses of XML in archaeology
- 3.7 Uses of XML for the provision of online content
- 3.8 Overview
Section 4: A Practical Evaluation of XML Technologies and TEI P4 for Archaeological Markup and Multi-layered Presentation
- 4.1 Background to the case-study
- 4.1.1 The North Yorkshire County Council HER and development-led archaeology
- 4.1.2 Users and user needs
- 4.1.3 The selection of reports for the case-study
- 4.1.3.1 Bar Lane, Roecliffe, North Yorkshire
- 4.1.3.2 Catterick Bridge, Catterick, North Yorkshire
- 4.1.3.3 Market Place, Thirsk, North Yorkshire
- 4.2 Implementation: aims and objectives
- 4.2.1 The general aims of the markup case-study
- 4.2.2 The specific aims of the encoding
- 4.3 Methodology: the encoding of archaeological text
- 4.3.1 The choice of XML technologies and the TEI P4 Guidelines
- 4.3.2 Structure versus content
- 4.3.3 Previous examples of archaeological markup
- 4.3.4 Terminology and data standards (Inscription wordlists and thesauri)
- 4.3.5 The compilation of the document type definition (DTD)
- 4.3.6 The TEI Header
- 4.3.7 The main text: front, body and back matter
- 4.4 Methodology: transformation and presentation of multi-layered output
- 4.4.1 The display of the XML documents in Microsoft Notepad, Word 2000 and Internet Explorer 6.0
- 4.4.2 The use of Cascading Stylesheets (CSS) to present the XML Documents
- 4.4.3 The use of XSLT and XPath for retrieval of selected content
- 4.4.3.1 Public: the extraction of report summaries, conclusions and images
- 4.4.3.2 Curator: The extraction of OASIS Project and HBSMR-related data
- 4.4.3.3 Specialist: the retrieval of the appendices
- 4.4.4 Other XML applications: the Wireless Markup Language (WML)
- 4.5 Evaluation and conclusions
Section 5: Towards a 'Real World' Application: The future of XML and Archaeological Grey Literature
- 5.1 The future and archaeological grey literature
- 5.2 The markup of grey literature reports
- 5.3 Advantages of online access to XML-encoded grey literature
- 5.4 A real world application?
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URL: http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue17/falkingham_toc.html
Last updated: Wed Apr 06 2005