Masjid Tuha Indrapuri (F1), Indonesia


General Attributes
DOI10.26301/8q1w-d307
Project NameMasjid Tuha Indrapuri (F1)
CountryIndonesia
StatusPublished
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Spatial DataDownload (Links to all available data types will be emailed)
Data Bounds (approx.)

Data Types

Data Type Size Device Name Device Type
Photogrammetry - Aerial15.6 GB GBDJI Phantom 4 Pro Drone
Data Derivatives2.33 GB GBNikon D5 DSLR
Background
Site DescriptionThe site (MAHS-IDN-ACH-ABS-IDP-S-001) is a mosque complex. The components of the mosque that still exist are the mosque building, the minaret, the cistern for ablution, the perimeter walls consisting of several levels, well with old cistern, and graves. (MAHS-IDN-ACH-ABS-IDP-S-001-F001) The prayer hall of the mosque is built in a traditional Acehnese style with a tiered roof supported by octagonal wooden pillars above a space left half open above low masonry walls. Nearby this main building is a minaret to the north and a cistern the east. These are all built atop a massive masonry platform of three levels, each with a surrounding wall. At the end of the north and south sides, there is a staircase structure. To the east of the north side staircase, there is an old well and cistern.as well as an old grave. The roof is supported with 36 wooden pillars: four in the center, twelve forming a middle perimeter, and twenty more arranged symmetrically outside that. The main pillars are 9.8m high supporting the top tier of the roof; the middle 6.4m supporting the second tier, and the lower roof rests upon the other 20 at a height of 2.5m. Each set of pillars is held together with roof beams. Another wooden frame holds the pillars into place at floor level. There are several ornamental carvings featuring vine and floral motifs on the wooden roof beams, particularly on the sections facing downward toward. In the southwest corner there is an Arabic inscription. The metal roof is topped with a patala". Inside the mosque
Project DescriptionThe Maritime Asia Heritage Survey works to systematically inventory and digitally document the endangered cultural heritage in the Maldives, Indonesia, and elswhere across the region. The materials documented through this work are critically endangered, facing both natural and human threats that jeopardize the survival and accessibility of historical information for this vital node in pre-modern global economic and religious networks at the cross-roads of an interconnected Indian Ocean world. The data made available here was collected by our Field Team using FARO Focus S350 Lidar scanner, Nikon D750 DSLR, and DJI Phantom 4 Pro drone, DJI Matrice 300RTK with ZenMuse L1 and P1 payloads.
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Additional InformationLearn more
Collection Date2021-02-08 to 2021-02-08
Publication Date2022-08-20
License TypeCC BY-NC-ND
Entities
ContributorsN/A
CollectorsMaritime Asia Heritage Survey
FundersArcadia Fund
PartnersKyoto University Center for Southeast Asian Studies , Indonesian Directorate General of Culture, Ministry of Education and Culture
Site AuthorityN/A
Citation
2022: Masjid Tuha Indrapuri (F1) - Photogrammetry - Aerial , Data Derivatives . Collected by Maritime Asia Heritage Survey . Distributed by Open Heritage 3D. https://doi.org/10.26301/8q1w-d307

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