I vote YES with a caveat, about the following line: - The death and the carbonization by the intense heat of a 300 °C gas cloud (E69) of the people of Pompeii resulted in petrified and later preserved in plaster bodies (E22).
The addition of 'later preserved in plaster' introduces a potential confusion, because other processes (excavation, conservation by plaster) intervene. I suggest to omit this phrase. And recent publications suggest the temperature was 500 degrees centigrade, so better leave off the 300 degrees as well.... Martijn On Tue, Oct 6, 2020 at 2:32 PM George Bruseker <[email protected]> wrote: > Dear all, > > In 11/2018 a discussion was started to revise the scope note of E81 > Transformation and to change the ranges of its relative properties p123 and > p124. In brief, it was argued that the range of the class was too broad > (E77 Persistent Item) and that it should be limited to E18 Physical Thing. > This change was accepted. You can find the history here: > > > http://www.cidoc-crm.org/Issue/ID-404-modification-of-scope-notes-and-ranges-for-e81-p123-p124 > > To support the new definition of the class and its properties new examples > were sought after. The HW was assigned to ET and AK. They have come up with > the following examples for the classes and relations in question. > > The proposed examples are to be found in the text pasted below. > > Please vote if you accept the examples. You can vote yes, yes with caveat > or no with explanation. Please vote by October 16, 2020. > > E81 Transformation > > Subclass of: E63 Beginning of Existence > > E64 End of Existence > > > Scope note: > > This class comprises the events that result in the simultaneous > destruction of one or more than one E18 Physical Thing and the creation of > one or more than one E18 Physical Thing that preserves recognizable > substance and structure from the first one(s) but has fundamentally > different nature or identity. > > Although the old and the new instances of E18 Physical Thing are treated > as discrete entities having separate, unique identities, they are causally > connected through the E81 Transformation; the destruction of the old E18 > Physical Thing(s) directly causes the creation of the new one(s) using or > preserving some relevant substance and structure. Instances of E81 > Transformation are therefore distinct from re-classifications (documented > using E17 Type Assignment) or modifications (documented using E11 > Modification) of objects that do not fundamentally change their nature or > identity. Characteristic cases are reconstructions and repurposing of > historical buildings or ruins, fires leaving buildings in ruins, taxidermy > of specimen in natural history. > > Examples: > > - the death and mummification of Tut-Ankh-Amun (transformation of > Tut-Ankh-Amun from a living person to a mummy) (E69, E81, E7) > - The death and petrification of the people of Pompeii during the > eruption of Vesuvius in the first century B.C (E69, E81, E7) > - The transformation of the Dominicaner Kerk building in Maastricht > from a church to a stable for the French cavalry in 1795 (following > Napoleon’s invasion) > - The transformation of the Dominicaner Kerk building in Maastricht > building from printing house to a bookshop in 2006 > > > In First Order Logic: > E81(x) ⊃ E63(x) > E81(x) ⊃ E64(x) > > Properties: > P123 resulted in (resulted from): E18 Physical Thing > P124 transformed (was transformed by): E18 Physical Thing > > P123 resulted in (resulted from) > > Domain: E81 Transformation > Range: E18 Physical Thing > Subproperty of: E63 Beginning of Existence. P92 brought into existence > (was brought into existence by): E77 Persistent Item > Quantification: many to many, necessary (1,n:0,n) > > Scope note: This property identifies the E18 Physical Thing or things that > are the result of an E81 Transformation. New items replace the transformed > item or items, which cease to exist as units of documentation. The physical > continuity between the old and the new is expressed by the link to the > common Transformation. > > Examples: > > - the transformation of the Venetian Loggia in Heraklion into a city > hall (E81) resulted in the City Hall of Heraklion (E22) > - the death and mummification of Tut-Ankh-Amun (E81) resulted in the > Mummy of Tut-Ankh-Amun (E22 and E20) > - The death and the carbonization by the intense heat of a 300 °C gas > cloud (E69) of the people of Pompeii resulted in petrified and later > preserved in plaster bodies (E22). > - The transformation of the Dominicaner Kerk building in Maastricht > into a stable (E81) resulted in Stable for the French Cavalry (E22) > - The transformation of the Dominicaner Kerk building in Maastricht > into a bookstore (E21) resulted in the Selexyz Dominicanen bookstore (E22) > > In First Order Logic: > P123(x,y) ⊃ E81(x) > P123(x,y) ⊃ E18(y) > P123(x,y) ⊃ P92(x,y) > > P124 transformed (was transformed by) > > Domain: E81 Transformation > > Range: E18 Physical Thing > > Subproperty of: E64 End of Existence. P93 took out of existence (was taken > out of existence by): E77 Persistent Item > > Quantification: one to many, necessary (1,n:0,1) > > Scope note: This property identifies the E18 Physical Thing or things that > have ceased to exist due to a E81 Transformation. > > The item that has ceased to exist and was replaced by the result of the > Transformation. The continuity between both items, the new and the old, is > expressed by the link to the common Transformation. > > Examples: > > - the transformation of the Venetian Loggia in Heraklion into a city > hall (E81) transformed the Venetian Loggia in Heraklion (E22) > - the death and mummification of Tut-Ankh-Amun (E81) transformed the > ruling Pharao Tut-Ankh-Amun (E21) > - The death and the petrification of the people of Pompeii during the > eruption of Vesuvius transformed the people of Pompeii (E21) > - The transformation of the Dominicaner Kerk building in Maastricht > into a stable for the French cavalry (E91) transformed the Dominicaner Kerk > building in Maastricht. > - The transformation of the Dominicaner Kerk building in Maastricht > into a bookstore transformed the Dominicaner Kerk building in Maastricht. > > > > Very much obliged, > > George Bruseker > Vice Chair CIDOC CRM SIG > _______________________________________________ > Crm-sig mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.ics.forth.gr/mailman/listinfo/crm-sig > -- Dr. Martijn van Leusen Associate Professor, Landscape Archaeology, Groningen Institute of Archaeology Poststraat 6, 9712ER Groningen (Netherlands) / phone +31 50 3636717 Member, Cluster 4 Teaching Board / Chair, Faculty of Arts Advisory Board for Data Management policies Academia page <https://rug.academia.edu/MartijnvanLeusen>
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