Acoustic survey provides a measurement-based approach for investigating heritage spaces in which architectural morphology, environmental conditions, and sound-related practices are physically interrelated. This study applies a portable and non-invasive survey protocol to the medieval cave sanctuary of San Michele di Mezzo, located in Fisciano, Southern Italy. The site consists of stratified natural and built spaces, including a lower cave, an upper cave, and a later upper church, and represents a relevant case study for assessing the acoustic behaviour of small, irregular, and fragile cultural heritage environments. The experimental procedure combined calibrated microphone recordings, time-domain signal inspection, third-octave-band analysis, and impulse-response-derived room-acoustic indicators, including reverberation, clarity, and definition parameters. Under the adopted source–receiver configurations, the results show acoustic differentiation among the lower cave, upper cave, and later church. The caves exhibit shorter decay times than the church over most frequency bands, while clarity and definition indicators reveal a frequency-dependent behaviour that does not support a general claim of the acoustic superiority of one space over another. Comparative data from other cave and cave-like environments further contextualize the measured response of San Michele di Mezzo. The findings do not imply intentional acoustic design; rather, in the measured configuration, they show that, under the chosen conditions, the long-lasting devotional centrality of the lower cave is compatible with an acoustic response that does not contradict spoken or sung devotional use. More broadly, the study contributes to applied acoustics by demonstrating that low-invasive field surveys can provide reproducible acoustic indicators for heritage interpretation, conservation-oriented documentation, and the investigation of intangible sound-related dimensions of cultural heritage.

Acoustic Survey for the Characterization of a Medieval Cave Church

Casazza, Marco
;
Barone, Fabrizio
2026

Abstract

Acoustic survey provides a measurement-based approach for investigating heritage spaces in which architectural morphology, environmental conditions, and sound-related practices are physically interrelated. This study applies a portable and non-invasive survey protocol to the medieval cave sanctuary of San Michele di Mezzo, located in Fisciano, Southern Italy. The site consists of stratified natural and built spaces, including a lower cave, an upper cave, and a later upper church, and represents a relevant case study for assessing the acoustic behaviour of small, irregular, and fragile cultural heritage environments. The experimental procedure combined calibrated microphone recordings, time-domain signal inspection, third-octave-band analysis, and impulse-response-derived room-acoustic indicators, including reverberation, clarity, and definition parameters. Under the adopted source–receiver configurations, the results show acoustic differentiation among the lower cave, upper cave, and later church. The caves exhibit shorter decay times than the church over most frequency bands, while clarity and definition indicators reveal a frequency-dependent behaviour that does not support a general claim of the acoustic superiority of one space over another. Comparative data from other cave and cave-like environments further contextualize the measured response of San Michele di Mezzo. The findings do not imply intentional acoustic design; rather, in the measured configuration, they show that, under the chosen conditions, the long-lasting devotional centrality of the lower cave is compatible with an acoustic response that does not contradict spoken or sung devotional use. More broadly, the study contributes to applied acoustics by demonstrating that low-invasive field surveys can provide reproducible acoustic indicators for heritage interpretation, conservation-oriented documentation, and the investigation of intangible sound-related dimensions of cultural heritage.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11386/4952180
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