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Digital Cartography: New Maps, Ancient History, November 2-3, Conference Program

October 5, 2018 in Conference, Interest

Digital Cartography: New Maps, Ancient History

Nov. 2-3, 2018

A conference co-sponsored by the Ancient World Mapping Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and Duke University’s Departments of Classical Studies and of Art, Art History & Visual Studies

All are welcome.  There is no registration fee, but do please notify us by October 28th that you plan to come on either or both days: just send a message with your name to awmc@unc.edu, with “Conference 2018” in the message subject line.  You will then receive details about the UNC-Duke Robertson bus and Saturday parking at Duke.

PROGRAM

 

Friday, November 2nd 

2.15-3.45 pm  AWMC Open House – drop in at your convenience – with demonstration of current work there, Ancient World Mapping Center, UNC, Chapel Hill, Davis Library 5010

5.15-6.45 pm  (Rubenstein 249, in Duke University Rubenstein Library, West Campus)  Welcome, and Keynote Address by Dr. George Bevan (Queen’s University, Ontario),

“Photogrammetry and Heritage Documentation in the 21st Century: Lessons from the Past and Challenges for the Future”

7.00-8.00 pm  (Duke University Bryan Center)  Reception

Saturday, November 3rd     

(Rubenstein 249, in Duke University Rubenstein Library, for the entire day)

9.00 am  Coffee, tea, juices, pastries 

 

Session 1  (chair: Mary T. Boatwright)

9.15-9.50 am  Christopher S. Saladin (University of Minnesota), “City in Transition: Mapping the Transformation of Ancient Carthage”

9.50-10.25 am  Loren T. Cowdery (University of Minnesota), “In Search of a Blueprint: Using GIS to Map the Republican Empire in the Western Mediterranean”

10.25-11.00 am  Gabriel Moss (UNC, Chapel Hill), “Mapping the Jewish Revolt (66-73 CE):     A GIS Analysis of Provincial Resistance”

 

11.00-11.20 am  Break  (coffee, tea, juices, pastries) 

 

Session 2  (chair: Maurizio Forte)

11.20-11.55 am  Chad Uhl (University of Kansas, Lawrence), “Quod versu dicere non est. Implications of the Unnamed Oppidulum in Horace’s Satires 1.5”

11.55am-12.30 pm  Micah Myers and Joseph Murphy (Kenyon College), “Teaching Roman Mobility: Digital Visualization in the Classroom and in Undergraduate Research”

12.30-1.05 pm  Lindsey A. Mazurek (University of Oregon) and Cavan W. Concannon (University of Southern California), “Mapping Social History: New Approaches to Epigraphy at Ostia”

 

1.05-2.15 pm   Lunch  (Duke campus eateries in the Brodhead Center – on your own)

 

Session 3  (chair: Richard Talbert)

2.15-2.50 pm  Katherine McCusker (Duke University) and Antonio LoPiano (Duke University), “Secrets Beneath the Surface: GPR and Remote Sensing at Vulci”

2.50-3.25 pm  Kristen Jones (Queen’s University, Ontario), “Mapping the Original Location of the Forma Urbis Romae: Digital Methods and Technical Constraints”

3.25-4.00 pm  Adam Mertel, Peter Ondrejka, David Zbíral, Hana Hořínková (Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic), “Early Christian Baptisteries – From Geocoding to Space-time Exploration”

 

4.00 pm  Closing remarks

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