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Etruscan chamber tombs made accessible in digital portal

Etruscan chamber tombs made accessible in digital portal
Hampus Olsson, researcher at the Swedish Institute in Rome. Credit: Jonathan Westin

Imagine stepping into a 2,500-year-old tomb—without ever leaving your sofa. Using advanced digital technology, Swedish researchers have documented and visualized nearly 280 Etruscan chamber tombs in Italy. The result is a new digital portal that opens up this cultural heritage to scholars, students, and the public worldwide.

"We are never the first to visit these places—they have been used by shepherds and farmers and recorded by archaeologists for more than a hundred years. Yet it sometimes feels as if time has stood still, and that we are intruding on a lasting silence," says Jonathan Westin, research engineer at the University of Gothenburg.

Westin has himself squeezed through narrow openings and crawled along dark passageways to document several tombs around San Giovenale in Italy.

Cultural heritage in a new digital form

The portal, already open to visitors, brings together earlier research from the Swedish Institute in Rome and combines it with new digital documentation made possible by recent technological advances.

"Plumb bobs, measuring tapes, and field notes now share space with photogrammetry, , and databases," Westin explains.

With this combined material, he and colleagues at the University of Gothenburg's research infrastructure for have built a digital model and an interface where each tomb can be explored.

  • Etruscan chamber tombs made accessible in digital portal
    Credit: Jonathan Westin
  • Etruscan chamber tombs made accessible in digital portal
    Etruscan painting. Credit: fresco, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

A virtual experience of hard-to-reach tombs

The project has also produced a Virtual Reality application designed to give users a more embodied sense of the tombs.

"Above all, the 3D scans allow people who have never been able to travel to these sites or descend into the chambers to both experience them and extract new data for the first time," says Westin.

In reality, the tombs are often difficult to access. They are located far from and often require crawling through collapsed passages and thick dust.

"Quite often you have to wriggle through debris in what, to an untrained eye, might just look like a cave. The air is heavy with dust, and you are acutely aware of how far away help would be if anything were to happen."

A king with a passion for archaeology

The Swedish Institute in Rome, which runs the project together with the University of Gothenburg, has played a central role in Swedish archaeology in Italy since 1925. The institute was heavily involved in the major excavations in southern Etruria in the 1950s. Today, its library is one of the world's leading resources in Etruscology, visited by scholars from across the globe.

"The excavations gained significant media attention, both in Sweden and in Italy, thanks in large part to King Gustav VI Adolf's involvement. The king, himself an archaeologist with a deep passion for ancient cultures, personally participated in the excavations up until the year before his death in 1973," says Hampus Olsson, senior lecturer at the Swedish Institute in Rome.

He and the other project members now hope that the digital database will continue to grow and become a resource for even more Swedish, Italian, and international projects.

Starting in 2026, the portal will also be used in teaching. Students at the University of Gothenburg will have the opportunity to gain hands-on experience in , 3D scanning, and digital publishing in collaboration with the Swedish Institute in Rome.

More information: Visit the portal:

Citation: Etruscan chamber tombs made accessible in digital portal (2025, September 18) retrieved 11 November 2025 from /news/2025-09-etruscan-chamber-tombs-accessible-digital.html
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