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Fig.18-c_Carved and ornamented stones
Fig.19_Ablaq masonry, 2nd category
Fig.20_1st category
Fig.22_3rd category
Fig.10_geodetic grid over rubble heap
Fig.41-c_Rubble management_Partial collapse of façade in 2019
Fig.18_1st category, carved and ornamented stone
Fig.18-b_securing fallen remains
Fig.17-c_Collapse of a façade
Fig.41-b_Marking missing stones after partial collapse
Fig.36_using a walking excavator to remove rubble
Fig.26_all sides photographs of labeled stone
Fig.23_3rd category
Fig.03_section drawings of rubble, with orthographic photography
Fig.17-a_Simulation of-lines of vulnerability
Fig.04_measurable rectified drone photography
Fig.04-b_contour lines over rectified photograph
Fig.04-c_Contour lines of a digital terrain model
Fig.07_view at rubble
Fig.24_ashlar voussoire stones within rubble field
Fig.08_execution of an geodetic grid over rubble heap
Animation before-after destruction of al-Khusrawiyya madrasa in Aleppo, Syria
Fig.09_geodetic grid over rubble heap
Fig.11_measurement (survey) of rubble field
Fig.43_Protective tarpaulin of outer walls
Fig.02_3D-scanning-Great-Mosque-of-Aleppo_Iconem-Agha-Khan-Trust-for-Culture_11
Al-Madrasa al-Hallawiyya, the current prayer hall was part of ِAleppo’s Byzantine cathedral
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