﻿id	Url	 Resource template 	 Resource class 	Title	Creator	Subject	Description	Publisher	Contributor	Date	Type	Format	Identifier	Language	Relation	Coverage	Rights	 Alternative Title 	Abstract	 Date Created 	 Date Issued 	 Date Modified 	Medium	 Is Replaced By 	Replaces	Requires	 Is Part Of 	 Has Part 	 Is Referenced By 	References	 Spatial Coverage 	 Temporal Coverage 	 Access Rights 	 Bibliographic Citation 	License	 Rights Holder 	 Cited by 	Cites	Editor	 List of editors 	Status	Doi	Identifier	Isbn	Issn	Issue	 Number of pages 	 Number of volumes 	Pages	 Short title 	Uri	Volume	Name	Surname	Homepage	 Funded by 	Account	Member	Status	Tag	Number	 Current Location 	 Is Shown At 	 Is Shown By 	 Europeana Rights 	 Europeana Type 	 Part of 	 Is supported by 	 Is supplied by 	Latitude	Longitude	Lat/long	 Has format 	 Operating systems 	 In series 
10231	https://chloe.cnr.it/s/BiDiAr/item/10231	 Academic Article 	bibo:AcademicArticle	 Building an urban image 	 White, Roger 					1996				eng			 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.en CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 		 Abandoned towns have long been recognised as one of the most important resources to understanding the development and decline of the urban environment. In Britain, the number of opportunities for studies into abandoned Roman towns is limited as most have continued in use until the present day. The Wroxeter Hinterland Project is currently engaged in research on the best-preserved deserted Roman town in Britain: Viroconium Cornoviorum, in Shropshire – modern Wroxeter. The approach has been to use a broad range of geophysical prospecting methods to elucidate the nature and density of occupation on the site. Standard geophysical techniques such as magnetometry and resistivity have been extensively deployed alongside the newer technologies of Ground-penetrating radar, multi-probe, continuous-reading automated resistivity, seismology and conductivity. Airborne survey is adding another dimension through multi-spectral scanning and conventional aerial photography, while sub-surface surveys are being hatched up with ground-truthing data collected through conventional survey methods. The results are being processed in the Project’s GIS database and will provide as full an insight into the nature of occupation at Wroxeter as is possible without further extensive excavation. It is intended that the results will be published in an atlas and will also be accessible via the World-Wide-Web. 								https://chloe.cnr.it/s/BiDiAr/item/2002																						137–147		http://www.archcalc.cnr.it/journal/id.php?id=132	7			https://www.zotero.org/groups/5293298/bidiar/items/98XDV7E9/item-list																				
