ANTH 608
Shelley Wachsmann, Ph.D.
Meadows Professor of Biblical Archaeology
Nautical Archaeology Program, Department of Anthropology
Office hours: Wednesdays 3:00-5:00 PM
Email: swachsmann@tamu.edu
Phone: Wed: (979) 847-9257 Mobile/Text: (979) 574-7693
Course Description
Students seeking a future in maritime archaeology require a wide knowledge of techniques, tools and methods used in the field. This seminar aims to introduce students to primary themes and tools in maritime archaeology. It will acquaint participants with remote sensing and mapping, interpreting, recording, and storing data used in maritime archaeological surveys. Students will study the theory pertaining to these topics and will also have opportunities to practice the required skills in exercises.
Specifically, this course will familiarize students with the following topics: A) concepts associated with remote sensing, B) basic methodologies for mapping an archaeological site, C) basic software available to map and record an archaeological site, D) fundamental ethical questions and legislation related to the survey and excavation of submerged cultural resources, E) advanced methods of recording artifacts, F) the most common analysis and sciences associated with the interpretation of a submerged site.
Topics covered in this course vary somewhat from year to year but may include, while not being limited to, remote sensing, aspects of maritime cultural resource management and deep submergence archaeology, as well as relevant technologies pertaining to field work and artifact study such as Geographic Information Systems (GIS), remote-sensing technologies, laws pertaining to maritime cultural resources, documentation tools (Faro Arm and X-ray fluorescence [XRF]) and methods. Some meetings may include practical training in handling equipment and recording archaeological sites, using library resources, learning specific computer software, and developing a clear vision of the problems associated with underwater survey, excavation and cultural resource management. Students will be required at the end of the course to submit a seminar paper and a conference poster.
During the course students will have the opportunity to interact directly with leaders in the various themes that compose the field of maritime archaeology as well as with experts in the technologies that makes this research possible.
ANTH 608 Maritime Skills/Schedule
(NB Speakers and schedule subject to change)
Week 1 |
Introduction Introduction/On Writing & On Creating a Conference Poster with Dr. Carolyn Kennedy |
Week 2 |
Dr. Isabel Rivera-Collazo: Community Engagement in Coastal Settings & the Use of Maritime Heritage in Support of Climate Action |
Week 3 |
Dr. Chris Dostal: The Philadelphia Gunboat Research Initiative: From Bow to Stern Analysis of a Shipwreck (Seminar paper and poster abstracts due in class) |
Week 4 |
Ms. Amy Borgens: On Being a State Nautical Archaeologist: The Skill Set |
Week 5 |
Mr. Josh Daniel: A Deep Dive in the Real World: A Career in Nautical Archaeology |
Week 6 |
Ms. Elizabeth Essex: You Can write Fiction and This is How |
Week 7 |
Mr. Jeff Morris: Introduction to Side-Scan Sonar and Magnetometers, Principals and Interpretation |
Week 8 |
Ms. Kim Faulk: Digital Interpretation Packages and Procedures/Life after Degree |
Week 9 | Spring Break |
Week 10 |
Dr. Amanda Evans: Project Planning and Interpretation |
Week 11 |
Carrie Sowden: Museums: The Job Where You Get to Do Everything |
Week 12 |
Dr. Alexis Catsambis: Submerged Cultural Heritage Management in the United States |
Week 13 |
Dr. Dana Yoerger: Deep Submergence Archaeology: The Final Frontier |
Week 14 |
Dr. Piotr Bojakowksi: Conflict Archaeology and Military History as a Profession (Seminar papers and posters due by 5 PM) |
Week 15 |
Students present their papers |
Grading Policy:
Grades in this course will be based on your class participation (20 percent), on a seminar paper (60 percent) and a poster (20 percent). In those classes in which we will be having presentations by external experts I will expect you to have read the references and to display a clear knowledge of the subject matter. Letter grades assigned will follow the standard TAMU scale: 100-90 = A, 89-80 = B, 79-70 = C, 69-60 = D, 59 and below = F.
Assignments
The research seminar paper
This paper, about 5,000 words/20 double-spaced, single-sided pages, allows you to demonstrate your proficiency in one of the aspects of the course. The choice of a topic for your paper is yours and I am open to any and all reasonable proposals as long as they fit within the limits of the seminar: I recommend finding a topic in which you wish to develop an expertise or that you find of particular interest. The paper should be carefully researched, using primarily original sources and focused on a well-defined topic. Use American Journal of Archaeology (AJA) reference style: download a copy of the style instructions here (http://www.ajaonline.org/submissions). Except for books, almost all the readings required for this course are available online on Canvas and/or at specified URLs (see below).
The poster
Today posters are an important method for scholars, particularly young scholars, to present their work at conferences and other professional meetings. Part of your grade will be based on the creation of a conference-worthy paper. Dr. Carolyn Kennedy will discuss best procedures for creating a poster during our first, introductory meeting. Expenses to produce the posters will be covered by the Department of Anthropology. The poster can deal with the topic of your course seminar paper, or cover a different subject, after clearing it with me.
Topic selection and abstracts
As topic selection can be a difficult process, and lead to procrastination, I encourage you to look over the material that we will cover and select topics early in the semester. The poster can be on the same subject as the student’s seminar paper. You are required to discuss your topic ideas with me. To help you in selecting topics, so that you will have time to work on them, I require that you submit to me 250-word abstracts, together with a preliminary bibliography, for both the seminar paper and the poster (two abstracts) at our third meeting. Remember, deadlines are our friends. Note that these abstracts should be statements of intent that describe the topics and explain why they are important. The abstracts should be considered as contracts between the student and the instructor regarding the topics of your seminar paper and poster. Should you wish to change or alter the topic of either, you must receive my permission to do so.
Submission date for seminar paper and poster.
Hard copies and pdfs (sent to a Canvas folder) of seminar papers and posters are due no later than 5 PM on the day of our penultimate class. Late submissions will automatically be docked a letter grade. (If both the seminar paper and poster are late, only one letter grade will be docked.) Given human nature, I highly recommend that you aim to submit your seminar paper and proposal a week or two prior to the deadline.
Office Hours
I encourage you to meet with me regularly outside of class hours to ensure that you are keeping up with the material and remain on schedule to complete your course requirements. A good rule of thumb is to aim to submit your seminar paper and poster at least a week before the deadline so that if you overshoot it you will not overshoot the actual deadline.
Readings
Week 1
Introduction
- The Chicago Manual of Style. Fourteenth Edition, Revised and Expanded. Chicago. 1993. Flesch, R.F. 1949. The Art of Readable Writing. New York.
- Hacker, D., 1988. Rules for Writers: A Concise Handbook. New York.
- Hodder, I. 1989. Writing Archaeology: Site Reports in Context. Antiquity 63: 268–274. Provost, G., 1990. Make Your Words Work. Cincinnati.
- Strunk, W., Jr. and E.B. White, 1979. The Elements of Style. Third Edition. London.
- Tichy, H. J. 1988. Effective Writing for Engineers Managers Scientists. Second Edition. New York, John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Reflections on Writing
Orwell’s Law of Language:1 “The great enemy of clear language is insincerity. When there is a gap between one’s real and one’s declared aims, one turns as it were instinctively to long words and exhausted idioms, like a cuttlefish squirting out ink…”
Orwell suggested six rules to improve one’s writing: Never use a metaphor, simile or other figure of speech, which you are used to seeing in print.
- Never use a long word where a short one will do.
- If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out.
- Never use the passive where you can use the active.
- Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word, or a jargon word if you can think of an everyday English equivalent.
- Break any of these rules sooner than say anything outright barbarous.
1 H. Rawson. 1997. Unwritten Laws: The Unofficial Rules of Life as Handed Down by Murphy and Other Sages. New York: 174–175.
Dr. Isabel Rivera-Collazo: Community Engagement in Coastal Settings & the Use of Maritime Heritage in Support of Climate Action
- Boger, R., S. Perdikaris and I. Rivera-Collazo. 2019. Cultural Heritage and Local Ecological Knowledge Under Threat: Two Caribbean Examples from Barbuda and Puerto Rico. Journal of Anthropology and Archaeology 7(2): 1–14.
- Rivera-Collazo, I. 2018. Grassroots Activism and Catastrophes: The Case of Cultural Heritage and Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico. The SAA Archaeological Record (January): 21–24.
- Rivera-Collazo, I. 2019. Severe Weather and the Reliability of Desk-Based Vulnerability Assessments: The Impact of Hurricane Maria to Puerto Rico’s Coastal Archaeology. Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology 15(2): 244–263.
- Rivera-Collazo, I., C. Rodríguez-Franco, J. J. Garay-Vázquez, et al. 2020. Towards a Definition and Practice of Communal Archaeology: Ethics, Informal Learning, and Citizen Science in the Practice of Indigenous Archaeology. Journal of Community Archaeology & Heritage 7(2): 120– 134.
- Stewart, T. J. 2019-2020. The Threat of Climate Change. American Archaeology (Winter 2019– 2020): 19-25.
Dr. Chris Dostal: The Philadelphia Gunboat Research Initiative: From Bow to Stern Analysis of a Shipwreck
- Anonymous. nd. Gunboat Philadelphia. National Museum of American History. (https://americanhistory.si.edu/explore/exhibitions/gunboat-philadelphia).
- Hagland, L.F. 1936. The Continental Gondola Philadelphia. United States Naval Institute Proceedings 62(5). (https://www.usni.org/magazines/proceedings/1936/may/continental gondola-philadelphia)
Ms. Amy Borgens: On Being a State Nautical Archaeologist: The Skill Set
- Cho, H. 2014. The Challenges and Needs of Museums in Safeguarding Underwater Cultural Heritage. Museum Management and Curatorship 29(5): 429–444.
Mr. Josh Daniel: A Deep Dive in the Real World: A Career in Archaeology
- Bloomberg.com. 2023. Hedge Fund Tycoon Anthony Clake Doubles as World’s Top Deep-Sea Treasure Hunter.( https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2023-deep-sea-treasure-hunter-hedge funds/?leadSource=uverify%20wall).
- Businessinsider.com, 2023. Hedge Fund Exec Funding Hunts for Treasures in Shipwrecks.(https://www.businessinsider.com/hedge-fund-exec-funding-hunts-treasure shipwrecks-ocean-marshall-wace-2023-11)
Ms. Elizabeth Essex: You Can write Fiction and This is How
- Vogler, C. 1992. The Writer’s Journey: Mythic Structure for Storytellers and Screenwriters. Studio City: Michael Weiss Productions.
Mr. Jeff Morris: Introduction to Side-Scan Sonar and Magnetometers, Principals and Interpretation
- Fish, J. P. and H. A. Carr. 1990. Sound Underwater Images: A Guide to the Generation and Interpretation of Side Scan Sonar Data. Orleans, EG&G Marine Instruments.
- Mazel, C., 1985. Side Scan Sonar Record Interpretation. Klein and Associates, Salem, NH.
Ms. Kim Faulk: Digital Interpretation Packages and Procedures/Life after Degree
- Baeye, M., R. Quinn, S. Deleu, et al. 2016. Detection of Shipwreck in Ocean Colour Satellite Imagery. Journal of Archaeological Science 66: 1–6.
- Carrier, B. M., A. Pulkkinen and M. Heinz. 2016. Recognizing Geomagnetic Storms in Marine Magnetometer Data: Toward Improved Archaeological Resource Identification Practices. Science and Technology of Archaeological Research 2(1): 1–14.
- Bingham, B., B. Foley, H. Singh, et al.. 2010. Robotic Tools for Deep Water Archaeology: Surveying an Ancient Shipwreck with an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle. Journal of Field Robotics 27(6): 702–717.
- Warren, D. J., C.-W. Wu, R. Church, et al. 2010. Utilization of Multibeam Bathymetry and Backscatter for Documenting and Planning Detailed Investigations of Deepwater Archaeological Sites. In OTC-20853-MS, Offshore Technology Conference (Houston, Texas, USA 3-6 MAY 2010): 1–8.
SPRING BREAK (No class)
Dr. Amanda Evans: Project Planning and Interpretation
- Evans, A. 2011. Working in Cultural Resource Management – One Perspective from Underwater Archaeology. The Underwater Blogger (The Museum of Underwater Archaeology) (February 15): Web address: https://muablog.wordpress.com/2011/02/15/working-in-cultural-resource management-–-one-perspective-from-underwater-archaeology-by-amanda-evans/.
- Evans, A. M. and M. E. Keith. 2011. The Consideration of Archaeological Sites in Oil and Gas Drilling Operations. UNESCO Scientific Colloquium on Factors Impacting Underwater Cultural Heritage Royal Library of Belgium, Brussels, Belgium: 1-11.
Carrie Sowden: Museums: The Job Where You Get to Do Everything
- Allen, M. 2002. Reaching The Hidden Audience: Ten Rules for the Archaeological Writer. In Public Benefits of Archaeology. B. Little, ed. University Press of Florida: 243–251. (https://faculty.washington.edu/plape/pubarchspr14/READINGS/Allen–rules%20for%20writing.pdf))
- Ford, B. and C. Sowden. 2019. Two Models for Volunteer Driven Underwater Archaeology in Lake Erie. MAHSNews 30(1): 9-12. (https://www.mahsnet.org/news/newsletters/V30_- 101_Spring_19.pdf)
- Kipp, A. 2016. Managing Previously Unmanaged Collections: A Practical Guide for Museums.Rowman & Littlefield Publishers: Lanham, MD.
Dr. Alexis Catsambis: Submerged Cultural Heritage Management in the United States
- Maarleveld, T. J. 2011. Ethics, Underwater Cultural Heritage, and International Law. In The Oxford Handbook of Maritime Archaeology. A. Catsambis, B. Ford and D. Hamilton, eds. Oxford University Press, New York: 917–941.
- Toner, M. 2011. The Battle for the Dunkirk Schooner. American Archaeology 15(3): 12–19.
Dr. Dana Yoerger: Deep Submergence Archaeology: The Final Frontier
- Wachsmann, S. 2011. Deep-Submergence Archaeology. In The Oxford Handbook of Maritime Archaeology. A. Catsambis, B. Ford and D. Hamilton, eds. Oxford University Press, New York: 202–231.
- Wachsmann, S. 2022. On the Potential of Deep-Submergence Archaeology. Ancient Near East Today 10(1 [published 06 JAN 22]): (https://www.asor.org/anetoday/2022/01/deep submergence-archaeology).
Dr. Piotr Bojakowksi: Conflict Archaeology and Military History as a Profession
- Gambin, T. & Hunt, A.P. (Eds.). 2020. International Conference on Aviation Archaeology and Heritage Valletta, Malta, 2017. Proceedings of the First International Conference on Aviation Archaeology and Heritage: Malta – November 2017. Midsea Books.
- Lickliter-Mundon, M. E. 2018. Aviation Archaeology: History, Theory, Practice and Direction. PhD diss. Texas A&M University.
- Marter, P., Visser, R., Alders, P., Röder, C., Gottwald, M., Mank, M., Hubbard, S. and U. Recker. 2017. The Excavation of WWII RAF Bomber, Halifax LV881-ZA-V. Journal of Conflict Archaeology 12(1), 29–45.
- Scott, G., & Gane, T. (2015). Aviation Archaeology Offshore: The Recovery of a Rare Ju88 Aircraft Wreck During Work for the New London Gateway Port. Journal of Conflict Archaeology 10(2), 75–95.
Students present their papers
ALL COURSES
- ANTH 313 – Historical Archaeology
- ANTH 316 – Nautical Archaeology
- ANTH 317 – Introduction To Biblical Archaeology
- ANTH 318 – Nautical Archaeology of the Americas
- ANTH 323 – Nautical Archaeology Of The Ancient Mediterranean
- ANTH 353 – Archaeology Of Ancient Greece
- ANTH 354 – Archaeology of Ancient Italy
- ANTH 402 – Archaeological Artifact Conservation
- ANTH 417 – Naval Warfare & Warships In Ancient Greece And Rome
- ANTH 418 – Romans, Arabs, and Vikings
- ANTH 420 – History and Archaeology of Pirates, Privateers, and Sea Raiders
- ANTH 436 – Ancient Egypt
- ANTH 438 – Ancient Egypt II
- ANTH 464-664 – Cultural Heritage and Resource Management
- ANTH 603 – Seafaring Life and Maritime Communities 1450-1950
- ANTH 605 – Conservation of Archaeological Materials I
- ANTH 606 – Conservation of Archaeological Materials II
- ANTH 608 – Skills in Maritime Archaeology
- ANTH 610 – Outfitting And Sailing The Wooden Ship 1400-1900
- ANTH 611 – Introduction To Nautical Archaeology
- ANTH 612 – Preclassical Seafaring
- ANTH 613 – Classical Seafaring
- ANTH 615 – History Of Wooden Shipbuilding Technology
- ANTH 616 – Research and Reconstruction of Ships
- ANTH 617 – Conservation of Archaeological Materials III
- ANTH 628 – New World Seafaring Anthropology
- ANTH 629 – Post-Medieval Seafaring Anthropology
- ANTH 663 – Analytical Methods in Archaeology and Conservation
- ANTH 685 – Archaeological Diving: Skills and Methods
Bibliographies from Previous Presenters
(The schedule is a subject to change, revisions, and refinements which will be posted)
Maritime Museums and Artifact Curation (Compiled by Mr. Arthur Cohn)
- Bartley, T.D., P.R. Bellico, and B.B. Bartley. 2004. Life on a Canal Boat: The Journals of Theodore D. Bartley (1861–1889). Fleischmanns, Purple Mountain Press.
- Bratten, John R. 2002. The Gondola Philadelphia & the Battle of Lake Champlain. College Station, Texas A&M University Press.
- Catsambis, A., B. Ford & D. Hamilton, eds. 2011. The Oxford Handbook of Maritime Archaeology. Oxford, Oxford University Press.
- Cohn, A.B. 2003. Lake Champlain’s Sailing Canal Boats: An Illustrated Journey from Burlington Bay to the Hudson River: Building the Canal Schooner Lois McClure. Basin Harbor, Lake Champlain Maritime Museum.
- Crisman, K.J. 1987. The Eagle, an American brig on Lake Champlain during the War of 1812. Shelburne, New England Press.
- Crisman, K.J. and A.B. Cohn. 1998. When Horses Walked on Water: Horse-Powered Ferries in Nineteenth-Century America. Washington, Smithsonian Institution Press.
- Delgado, J.P. 1997. Encyclopaedia of Underwater and Maritime Archaeology. London, British Museum Press.
- Graffagnino, J.K., H.N. Muller, and K.Peterson-Ishaq. 2014. The Vermont Difference: Perspectives from the Green Mountain State. Woodstock Foundation-Vermont Historical Society.
- Hill, R.N. 1995. Lake Champlain: Key to Liberty. Woodstock, Countryman Press.
- Lundeberg, P.K. 1995. The Gunboat Philadelphia and the Defense of Lake Champlain in 1776. Basin Harbor, Lake Champlain Maritime Museum.
- Ross, O. 1997. The Steamboats of Lake Champlain 1809–1930. [Albany]: Champlain Transportation Co.
- Ruppé, C., and J. Barstad. 2002. International Handbook of Underwater Archaeology. New York, Plenum Publishers.
- Spirek, J.D. and D.A. Scott-Ireton. 2003. Submerged Cultural Resource Management: Preserving and Interpreting our Maritime Heritage. New York, Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers.
- Varmer, Ole. 2014. Underwater Cultural Heritage Law Study. BOEM-NOAA, U.S. Department of Interior, January.
Geographic Information Systems (GIS) (Compiled by Dr. Cecilia Smith)
General
- Getting Started with GIS https://training.esri.com/gateway/index.cfm?fa=catalog.webCourseDetail&courseid=2500
- The Geospatial Revolution https://geospatialrevolution.psu.edu/trailer.php
- ORBIS, the Stanford Geospatial Network Model of the Roman World https://orbis.stanford.edu/
- Bampton, M. 1993. Coastal Management Planning in Maine: Geoarchaeology in Service of Society. In Abstracts: 1993 AAG Annual Meeting, Atlanta, Georgia Association of American Geographers (AAG), 1993: 11.
- Beitzel, B.J. 2007. Joint Nautical Ventures on the Mediterranean Sea by Tyrian Phoenicians and Early Israelites. In The Association of American Geographers 2007 Annual Meeting (San Francisco, California Association of American Geographers [AAG], 2007): 17–21.
- Breen, C. and W. Forsythe. 2001. Management and Protection of the Maritime Cultural Resource in Ireland.” Coastal Management 1: 41–51.
- Breen, C., R. Quinn, and W. Forsythe. 2007. A Preliminary Analysis of Historic Shipwrecks in Northern Ireland. Historical Archaeology 3: 4-8.
- *Breman, J. 2003. Marine archaeology goes underwater with GIS. Journal of GIS in Archaeology 1: 23–32.
- Broodbank, C. 1993. Ulysses without Sails: Trade, Distance, Knowledge and Power in the Early Cyclades. World Archaeology 3: 315–31.
- Brown, A. G., Davis, F., Dinnin, Y. and D. Walling. 2004. Late Holocene Biodiversity, Baseline Conditions and Floodplain Rehabilitation. The 30th Congress of the International Geographical Union, August 2004.
- Callaghan, R., and C. Scarre. 2009. Simulating the Western Seaways. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 4: 357–72.
- Ford, B. 2011. Coastal Archaeology. In The Oxford Handbook of Maritime Archaeology. A. Catsambis, B. Ford and D. Hamilton, eds. Oxford University Press, New York: 763–785.
- Ford, B. 2007. Down by the Water’s Edge: Modeling Shipyard Locations in Maryland, USA. International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 1: 125–37.
- Green, D. 2010. Geoarchaeology of Prehispanic Agricultural Landscapes in the Bais-Tanjay Basin Negros, Oriental. Illinois, University of Illinois at Chicago.
- Green, D.R. 1995. Preserving a Fragile Marine Environment: Integrating Technology to Study the Ythan Estuary. Mapping Awareness 3(April): 28–30.
- Groom, D. M., D. Wheatley, G. P. Earl, S. J. Poppy, and I. Oxley. 2000. Maritime Fife: Managing. Fife’s Underwater Heritage: A Feasibility Study for a Maritime Archaeological GIS. In Contemporary Themes in Archaeological Computing: Computer Applications in Archaeology 1997 Conference Proceedings. University of Birmingham/Oxbow Monographs, Oxford.
- Grossman-Bailey, I. 2001. “The People Who Lived by the Ocean:” Native American Resource Use and Settlement in the Outer Coastal Plain of New Jersey. Temple University.
- Ilves, K. 2009. Discovering Harbours? Reflection on the State and Development of Landing Site Studies in the Baltic Sea Region. Journal of Maritime Archaeology 2: 149–163.
- Joslin, T. 2010. Middle and Late Holocene Hunter-Gatherer Adaptations to Coastal Ecosystems along the Southern San Simeon Reef, California. California, University of California, Santa Barbara.
- Keller, K.E. 2007. Maritime Archaeology GIS Tool for the NWHI Marine National Monument. In 2007 Esri International User Conference (San Diego, CA ESRI, 2007).
- Leidwanger, J. 2013. Modeling Distance with Time in Ancient Mediterranean Seafaring: A GIS Application for the Interpretation of Maritime Connectivity. Journal of Archaeological Science 40: 3302–3308.
- Mather, R. 1999. Technology and the Search for Shipwrecks. Journal of Maritime Law and Commerce 2: 175–184.
- Nadine, S. 1984. Supply Routes and the Consumption of Glass in First Millennium CE Butrint (Albania). Journal of Archaeological Science 11: 2939–2948.
- Nicolardi, M. 2010. Interpreting a Coherent Post-Medieval Shipwreck: A Qualitative Spatial Approach Supported by GIS: 9.
- Oxley, I. 1998. The Investigation of the Factors that Affect the Preservation of Underwater Archaeological Sites. In Maritime Archaeology, Springer US: 523–529.
- Pitts, M. 2007. Mapping an underwater world. Archaeology 60(1): 30–34.
- Reeder, L.A., C.R. Torben and J.M. Erlandson. 2012. Our Disappearing Past: A GIS Analysis of the Vulnerability of Coastal Archaeological Resources in California’s Santa Barbara Channel region. Journal of Coastal Conservation 16(2): 187–197.
- Rogers, A. 2011. Reimagining Roman Ports and Harbours: The Port of Roman London and Waterfront Archaeology. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 2: 207–225.
- Sharfman, J. 1994. The Application of a Geographical Information System on a Maritime Archaeological Project: The Example of the Excavation of the VOC-Ship ‘Oosterland’ (1697). Department of Archaeology.
- Titanic, Exploring with GIS: A) (https://storymaps.esri.com/stories/titanic/), B) (https://edcommunity.esri.com/resources/arclessons/lessons/e/exploring_the_titanic_with_gis)
- *Wright, Dawn J. 2005. Spatial Reasoning for Terra Incognita: Progress and Grand Challenges of Marine GIS. In Place Matters: Geospatial Tools for Marine Science, Conservation and Management in the Pacific Northwest. Corvallis, OR, Oregon State University Press: 272–286. For additional sources, explore Esri’s GIS Bibliography: https://gis.library.esri.com/.
Overview of 3D Digitization Techniques (Compiled by Dr. Chris Dostal)
- Aimers, J. J., D. J. Farthing and A. N. Shugar. 2011. Handheld XRF Analysis of Maya Ceramics: A Pilot Study Presenting Issues Related to Quantification and Calibration. In Studies on Archaeological Sciences: Handheld XRF for Art and Archaeology. A. N. Shugar and J. Mass, eds. Leuven, Leuven University Press: 423–448.
- Allen, P., S. Feiner, A. Troccoli, et al. 2004. Seeing into the Past: Creating a 3D Modeling Pipeline for Archaeological Visualization. In Proceedings of the 2nd International Symposium on 3D Data Processing, Visualization, and Transmission (6-9 September, 2004, Thessaloniki, Greece). J. Aloimonos, ed. Los Alamitos, CA, IEEE Computer Society.
- Artioli, G. 2009. Spectroscopy between Physics and Chemistry. In Scientific Methods and Cultural Heritage: An Introduction to the Application of Materials Science to Achaeometry and Conservation Science. G. Artioli, ed. Oxford, Oxford University Press: 28–37.
- Boehler, W. and A. Marbs. 2004. 3D Scanning and Photogrammetry for Heritage Recording: A Comparison. In Geoinformatics 2004 (Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Geoinformatics − Geospatial Information Research: Bridging the Pacific and Atlantic (University of Gävle, Sweden, 7–9 June 2004): 291–298.
- Drap, P., J. Seinturier, B. Hijazi, et al. 2015. The ROV 3D Project: Deep-Sea Underwater Survey Using Photogrammetry: Applications for Underwater Archaeology. ACM Journal on Computing and Cultural Heritage 8(21): 21:1–24.
- Ferguson, J. R. 2012. X-Ray Fluorescence of Obsidian: Approaches to Calibration and the Analysis of Small Samples. In Studies on Archaeological Sciences: Handheld XRF for Art and Archaeology. A. N. Shugar and J. Mass, eds. Leuven, Leuven University Press: 401–422.
- McCarthy, J. 2014. Multi-Image Photogrammetry as a Practical Tool for Cultural Heritage Survey and Community Engagement. Journal of Archaeological Science 43:175–185.
- Moens, L., A. von Bohlen and P. Vandenabeele. 2000. X-Ray Fluorescence. In Modern Analytical Methods in Art and Archaeology. E. Ciliberto and S. Guiseppe, eds. New York, John Wiley & Sons: 55–79.
- Rajapakse, R. P. C. J., Y. Tokuyama and R. Somadeva. 2011. Virtual Reconstruction and Visualization of Pre and Proto Historic Landscapes in Sri Lanka. In The Proceedings of the 2011 International Conference on Biometrics and Kansei Engineering, IEEE.: 198–203.
Remote Sensing (Compiled by Ms. Aubrey Kozak)
- Bingham, B., B. Foley, S. Hanumant, et al. 2010. Robotic Tools for Deep Water Archaeology: Surveying an Ancient Shipwreck with an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle. Journal of Field Robotics 27(6): 702–717.
- Di Iorio, A., D. Biliouris, R. Guzinski, et al. 2015. Innovation Technologies and Applications for Coastal Archaeological Sites FP7 – ITACA. The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences (36th International Symposium on Remote Sensing of Environment, 11–15 May 2015, Berlin, Germany) XL-7/W3: 1367–1373.
- Evers, L. G., D. N. Green, N. W. Young, et al. 2013. Remote Hydroacoustic Sensing of Large Icebergs in the Southern Indian Ocean: Implications for Iceberg Monitoring. Geophysical Journal International 40: 4694–4699.
- Ferentinos, G., G. Papatheodorou, M. Geraga, et al. 2015. The Disappearance of Helike Classical Greece—New Remote Sensing and Geological Evidence. Remote Sensing 7: 1263– 1278.
- Kozak, G. 2013. Small AUV with Side-Scan Sonar/PDBS Bathymetric and Magnetometer Payloads Prove Capable in Littoral Zone. Ocean News & Technology (July): 16-17.
- Piecuch, C. G., K. J. Quinn and R. M. Ponte. 2013. Satellite-Derived Interannual Ocean Bottom Pressure Variability and Its Relation to Sea Level. Geophysical Research Letters 40: 3106–3110.
- Rodgers, D. H., P. M. Beauchamp, A. D. Chave, et al. n.d. NEPTUNE Regional Observatory System Design: 1–10.
- Roman, C. and I. R. Mather. 2010. Autonomous Underwater Vehicles as Tools for Deep Submergence Archaeology. Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part M: Journal of Engineering for the Maritime Environment 224(4): 327–340.
- Wynn, R. B., V. A. I. Huvenne, T. P. Le Bas, et al. 2014. Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs): Their Past, Present and Future Contributions to the Advancement of Marine Geoscience. Marine Geology 352: 451–468.
Hands On with Side-Scan Sonar, Magnetometers and Hypack (Compiled by Mr. JB Pelletier: Workshop)
- Understanding Coordinate Systems and Projections for ArcGIS – YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-2z_WP7N7to)
- HYPACK 2020: Intro to Surveying and HYPACK – YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yk9QRJzBuVQ&t=3723s)
- HYPACK 2020: Single Beam Survey – YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FwMdfzdfK9I)
- New HYPACK Hardware Setup and Side Scan Survey Signal Tips – YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ySk0iuBCXnA)
- HYPACK Side Scan Mosaicing – YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=STusiXjky8U)
- HYPACK: Marine Search: Post-Processed Mosaics – YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mIW-7GdAuG8)
WRPLOT VIEW software (free)
- Lakes Environmental | WRPLOT View [free] – Wind Rose Plots for Meteorological Data (weblakes.com) (https://www.weblakes.com/products/wrplot/index.html)
- 1) WRPLOT View (Windrose Plotting Software) – YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQij7LrwnZk)
- 2) How to make a wind rose in excel – YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=goLqJp2g87c)
The Fun of Fundraising (Compiled by Dr. Robert Bob Walker)
- Walker, R. L., 2015. Footprints in Aggieland. College Station, Texas A&M University Press: 115–124 (On Fundraising).
The Ancient Mediterranean Digital Project: From Idée Fixe to Implementation (Dr. Tzveta Manolova)
- Amico, N., P. Ronzino, V. Vassallo, et al. 2018. Theorizing Authenticity – Practising Reality: The 3D Replica of the Kazaphani Boat. In Authenticity and Cultural Heritage in the Age of 3D Digital Reproductions. Paola Di Giuseppantonio Di Franco, Fabrizio Galeazzi and V. Vassallo, eds. (Online), McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research: 111–122. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/items/c3a0ef48-dd92-4057-8944-84031ac12553/full.
- Apollonio, F. I., F. Fantini, S. Garagnani, et al. 2021. A Photogrammetry-Based Workflow for the Accurate 3D Construction and Visualization of Museums Assets. Remote Sensing 13(3: 486). https://doi.org/10.3390/rs13030486.
- Lercari, N. and G. Busacca. 2020. A Glimpse through Time and Space: Visualizing Spatial Continuity and History Making at Çatalhöyük, Turkey. Journal of Eastern Mediterranean Archaeology and Heritage Studies 8(2): 99–122.
Sailing the Maritime Library (Mayo-Thomas Room (Ms. Sierra Laddusaw)
- Blouin, F. X., Jr. 2010. Thoughts on Special Collections and Our Research Communities. RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, & Cultural Heritage 11(1): 23–31.
- Iorga, A. 2019. Archives as Ruins: Means of Understanding the Future in an Era of Wrecks. Martor 11(1): 43–54.