
SLIDE SHOW: UC s Paperless Research to be Highlighted at International Conference
New technology is revolutionizing the precise recording of history at an ancient, lost city, bucking a tradition that has been in place for centuries. University of Cincinnati researchers will present The Paperless Project: The Use of iPads in the Excavations at Pompeii at the 39th annual international conference of Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology (CAA). The conference takes place April 12-16 in Beijing, China.
Click here to view a slideshow of UC's fieldwork in Pompeii.
The iPad research experiment, led by Steven Ellis, UC assistant professor of classics, and John Wallrodt, a senior research associate for the Department of Classics, has been featured on the National Geographic Channel as well as Apples website. Thats after the researchers took six iPads to UCs excavation site at Pompeii last summer. The iPads themselves were just being introduced at the time.
UC teams of archaeologists have spent more than a decade at the site of the Roman city that was buried under a volcano in 79 AD. The project is producing a complete archaeological analysis of homes, shops and businesses at a forgotten area inside one of the busiest gates of Pompeii, the Porta Stabia.
Through years of painstaking recording of their excavations, the researchers are exploring the social and cultural scene of a lost city and how the middle class neighborhood influenced Pompeian and Roman culture.
The standard archaeological approach to recording this history a 300-year tradition involves taking precise measurements, drawings and notes, all recorded on paper with pencil. But last summer, the researchers found that the handheld computers and their ability to digitally record and immediately communicate information held many advantages over a centuries-honed tradition of archaeological recording.
Theres a common, archival nature to what were doing. Theres a precious timelessness, a priceless sort of quality to the data that were gathering, so we have made an industry of being very, very careful about how we record things, explains Ellis. Once weve excavated through it, its gone, so ever since our undergraduate years, weve become very, very good and consistent at recording. Were excited about discovering theres another way, Ellis says.
Because the trench supervisor is so busy, it can take days to share handwritten notes between trenches, explains Wallrodt. Now, we can give them an (electronic) notebook every day if they want it.
Wallrodt says one of the biggest concerns of adopting the new technology was switching from drawing on a large sheet of paper to sticking ones finger on the iPads glass. With the iPad, theres also a lot less to carry. Theres no big board for drawing, no ruler and no calculator.
The researchers say they plan to pack even more iPads on their trip to Pompeii this June. The research project is funded by the Louise Taft Semple Fund through the UC Department of Classics.
The CAA is an international organization of archaeologists, mathematicians and computer scientists. The international conference aims to encourage communication between those disciplines, provide a survey of current work in the field and stimulate discussion and future progress.
The University of Cincinnati Classics Department is one of the most active centers for the study of the Greek Bronze Age and Classical Antiquity in the United States.
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