Moscow-Sana
The Russian State University of Sevastopol in the Crimea has announced that it has printed a 3D model of the ruins of Palmyra, which was damaged by the attacks of terrorist organizations.
The director of the University's Polytechnic Institute, Vasily Golovin, said that the model is wide-dimensional and reaches a length of five meters and consists of about fifty single panels that were printed on 3D printers, indicating that the printing process took more than three months and was done in black and white and will be colored in other colors. In Petersburg.
Sources at Sevastopol University announced earlier that the 3D model will be printed on the basis of images taken by university experts between 2016 and 2019 by drones on which cameras with vertical and side vision were installed, indicating that more than 55 thousand of these images were captured in addition to thousands. Ground images of the most important monuments of the ancient city.
The Directorate of Antiquities and Museums indicated in a statement to SANA last August that after the great destruction of the ancient city of Palmyra by the terrorist organization (ISIS), the Russian experts at the Russian Academy of Sciences and the Hermitage Museum undertook a three-dimensional documentation project.
On the 17th of March 2017, the Syrian Arab Army regained control of the city of Palmyra after defeating the terrorist organization (ISIS), which destroyed many of its archaeological sites.