“…Today, archaeologists have used new developments in digital technologies to better record, preserve, and digitally recreate historic and cultural heritage sites. Some of these methods, including the combination of GIS, unmanned aerial photography, and photogrammetry have allowed archaeologists to create detailed and precise visualizations of large archaeological sites, in process excavations, and detailed 3D models of unique artefacts and wholescale sites (see, for example, Barazzetti, Previtali, and Roncoroni 2018;Olson et al 2013;Morandi, Tremari, and Mandelli 2017). Additionally, archaeologists have turned to virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) to recreate historic sites or to complement contemporary landscapes with the additional projection of historic imagery or virtual models of historic buildings (Ellenberger 2017; Simona Morandi and Tremari 2017; Eve 2017; González-Tennant 2016).…”