Thursday, July 7, 2016

The Future of the Past: From Amphipolis to Mosul, New Approaches to Cultural Heritage Preservation in the Eastern Mediterranean

Edited by Konstantinos Chalikias, Maggie Beeler, Ariel Pearce, and Steve Renette
The volume presents the proceedings of the conference “The Future of the Past” held at the UPenn Museum on April 10th and 11th, 2015.
Read The Future of the Past

List of Chapters

The Future of the Past: From Amphipolis to Mosul, New Approaches to Cultural Heritage Preservation in the Eastern Mediterranean
Konstantinos Chalikias, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Maggie Beeler, Bryn Mawr College
Go, Do Good! Responsibility and the Future of Cultural Heritage in the Eastern Mediterranean in the 21st Century
Morag M. Kersel, DePaul University
Contested Antiquities, Contested Histories: The City of David as an Example
Rannfrid I. Thelle, Wichita State University
Cultural Racketeering in Egypt—Predicting Patterns in Illicit Activity: Quantitative Tools of the 21st-Century Archaeologist
Katie A. Paul, The Antiquities Coalition
Beyond the Destruction: Cultural Diplomacy on the Island of Cyprus
Leah Marangos, State University of New Jersey at Rutgers
The Materiality of Post-War(s): The Impact of Conflict on the Archaeology and Landscape of Iraqi Kurdistan
Kyra Kaercher, University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
The Reincarnation of the Damned Qajar Palace: From Palace to Prison, from Prison to Museum
Zohreh Soltani, State University of New York at Binghamton
Dealing with Legacy Data: Lessons from the Ur of the Chaldee’s Project
Simon Denham, The British Museum, and Sasha Renninger, University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Ancient Near Eastern Material Culture Studies and Reflectance Transformation Imaging
Ashley Fiutko Arico, Johns Hopkins University, Nathaniel E. Greene, University of Wisconsin–Madison, and Heather Dana Davis Parker, Johns Hopkins University
The Power of the Future: Re-Analyzing the House of the Rhyta at Pseira
Miriam G. Clinton, Rhodes College
Visualizing Structural Issues Through Photogrammetric 3D Documentation of Cultural Heritage: The Venetian Sea-Fortress at Herakleion, Crete, Greece
Gianluca Cantoro, Institute for Mediterranean Studies (IMS-FORTH), Vassiliki Sythiakakis, Ephorate of Antiquities of Herakleion—Hellenic Ministry of Culture, and Stelios Manolioudis, Independent geologist
- See more at: https://www.archaeological.org/news/sitepreservationhcaspecialpubs/21700#sthash.RwK8GKt0.dpuf

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