Smart Archaeology (2019-2020)
This Bass Connections project team continued work begun in 2017-2018 and 2018-2019 that focuses on smart archaeology. The 2019-2020 team focused on the digital investigation of the pre-Roman archaeological landscape of Vulci, Cerveteri and Tarquinia, the most important and visited pre-Roman sites in Central Italy. All three sites include thousands of uninvestigated tombs and urban spots, hidden by crops, vegetation and modern settlements.
Instead of traditional methods, the project combines data from a range of noninvasive technologies—including rover-robots, magnetometry, ground-penetrating radar, drones, virtual reality and even a “smart trowel” equipped with multiple sensors. This approach creates a new model for studying and interpreting ancient cities.
Timing
Summer 2019 – Summer 2020
Team Outputs
New Technology to Explore an Ancient Past (Fortin Foundation Bass Connections Virtual Showcase 2020)
Vulci 3000: Technology in Archaeology (blog post by Anna Gotskind)
Tour of Virtual Excavation App (video by Aaron Paskin)
VR Smart Trowel (video by Todd Berreth)
Vulci 3000: Maurizio Forte and Antonio LoPiano (video by Anna Gotskind)
Vulci 3000: Major Finds (video by Anna Gotskind)
The Life of an Artifact (video by Anna Gotskind)
Smart Archaeology: Uncovering Secrets beneath the Surface (interactive presentation by Maurizio Forte and student team members, Duke University, John Hope Franklin Center for Interdisciplinary and International Studies, November 20, 2019)
This Team in the News
Explore an Ancient City with the Smart Archaeology Team
Traveling Back in Time through Smart Archaeology
I&E Graduate Fellow’s Work Brings History to Life
Antonio LoPiano, Vulci 3000 Archaeological Project
Where the Scholarly Work Takes Them
Vulci 3000: A High-Tech Excavation
Vulci 3000: Technology in Archaeology
Using Today’s Technology to Discover an Ancient Past
See earlier related team, Smart Archaeology (2018-2019).