Dear all
My question might become a frequently asked question. I have read my notes and the email correspondence and find little about reifications. As far as I can see from (not far enough?), the suggestion is to express reification (a word I don't find in any dictionary) as in RDF and that it should not be a part of CRM as such.

We (that is, the Norwegian Musuem Project) try to make our database models conformant with CRM (let us call this a CRM database). Our databases contain information about the artefacts and objects seen as museum objects (houskeeping) and classification information about the same objects. (not unusual of course).

1) A classification can be expressed by a type assignment (E17) giving a physical object a type or several types, that is, a value(s) taken from thesaura or classification lists. The when-, who-, where-, 'on basis on which documents'- facts with respect to the classification event can also easily be expressed in the CRM way. This is the traditional artefact or inventory database solution.

2) On the other hand the CRM invites to create and populate models of the past as well as the more prosaic present described above in 1. An artefact will typically be represented as an instance of physical object (E22). The artefact is the result of a production event expressed by a property connecting the physical object to an instance of (E12, production) and so on. The when-, who-, where-, why- fact with respect to the (assumed) events connected to an artefact or museum object in the past can also easily be expressed in the CRM way. However, the information pieces populating such a model are the result of an archaeologist's or a scolar's work. The may have been extracted from a written source or entered directly into the information system by the archaeologist from his or her head during the classification event described in 1.

If we combine the two databases in 1 and 2 into a single CRM database. Is there any way to connect the information pieces (that is, instances of events and properties) in 2 to (the instance of) the classification event in 1 in the CRM as such (Am I blind?) or is this outside the scope of CRM? It is important for me to find a solution. I remember that this was touched upon in a discussion in Paris.

A concrete example from our material: Assume that another archaeologist come to a completely different solution in 2, then we need to identify who said what and when why etc. A classical example in Norway is connected to a big box of pieces of flint collected on a mountain in western Norway (Flint does not occur naturally in Norway and is usually collected when neolithic sites are excavated). The archeologist leading the excavation classified the flint piece collection to be the result of the production of a long series of axes and wrote papers based on this assumption. In the 1990 an eager soul tried to do some refitting and come to the very convincing conclustion that the pieces stem from one single axe. A solution to this problem seems also to be adequate for the ARCHON system ddescribed in a talk given by a colleque of Martin at CAA2002 in Crete.

Best wishes
 Christian-Emil



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