Sunday, September 26, 2010

I got my new ipad yipeeeeee!

Use of new technologies!!?? I copied this from ipad propaganda, but it's still quite interesting!!

In Pompeii — the longest continuously excavated archaeological site in the world — iPad is is being used by scientists working in the field. Rather than recording notes and sketches on paper, researchers at the site use iPad and apps to capture historical data faster, more easily, and with far better accuracy.

Deep Data

For Dr. Steven Ellis, who directs the University of Cincinnati’s archaeological excavations at Pompeii, perhaps the most significant discovery at the site this year was iPad. Ellis credits the introduction of six iPad devices at Pompeii with helping his team solve one of the most difficult problems of archaeological fieldwork: how to efficiently and accurately record the complex information they encounter in the trenches.

Most archaeological researchers today collect data from their sites as others have for the past 300 years. “It’s all pencil and paper,” says Ellis. “You have to draw things on paper, or in preprinted forms with boxes. That’s a problem because all these pages could be lost on an airplane, they could burn, they could get wet and damaged, or they could be written in unintelligible handwriting. And eventually they have to be digitized or entered into a computer anyway.”

Although portable computers offer a paperless solution, field archaeologists rarely use them in the trenches because their size, input limitations, battery life, and sensitivity to dirt and heat make them impractical in the harsh conditions of a dig.


iPad Rx

But Ellis, Assistant Professor of Classics at the University of Cincinnati, was determined to find a better way to collect data for his current project, which involves excavating below the floor line of an entire neighborhood near the main thoroughfare of Pompeii. He and a handpicked team of 35 scholars hope to learn from the patterns of reconstruction under the buildings how middle-class Pompeian families actually lived during the 2000 years before a volcanic eruption covered their city in AD 79.

“I’ve been very lucky to get permission to dig up an entire neighborhood,” says Ellis. “This gives me a real chance of looking not only into a single building but at how a whole community of families developed over time.”

The idea of using iPad to collect the massive data the project would generate came from Ellis’s University of Cincinnati colleague John Wallrodt, an expert on digital databases for archaeological projects. Wallrodt had looked unsuccessfully into using various tablet devices for field research, but when iPad was introduced in January 2010, he knew at once that it was right for their project. Says Wallrodt, “Perfectly portable, with no moving parts, a Multi-Touch screen, and a battery that lasts the whole workday, iPad was practically custom built for our needs.”

Adds Ellis: “It was the ability to enter so many disparate kinds of information, recording everything from architectural elements to fish scales and bones to the actual sequences of events. That my team could both type and draw on the screen, and also examine all previously entered data, made it an ideal single-device solution.”



Forms and Functions

Excavators generally make four kinds of paper records in the field: forms (sometimes a hundred per trench) for describing soil layers and features; notebook entries for recording elevations and space; daily scaled drawings of the trench; and a Harris Matrix, an illustration that shows chronological relationships among layers.

With iPad, Wallrodt was able to re-create each of those functions using “off-the-shelf” apps from the App Store. FMTouch replaced paper forms by allowing researchers to make direct entries into their database forms on iPad. The Pages app supplanted paper notebooks, enabling them to not only enter notations on the iPad keyboard but also import drawings and photos. Scaled drawings were made directly on iPad in iDraw. And OmniGraffle handled the intricate matrix illustrations.

“iPad replaced all of these functions and added many others,” says Wallrodt. “In this way, all of our piles of paper were replaced with a single 1.5-pound device.”

iPad Revolution

Ellis, who estimates that iPad has already saved him a year of data entry, plans to increase the number of iPad devices from one to two per trench. “The recovery of invaluable information from our Pompeian excavations is now incalculably faster, wonderfully easier, unimaginably more dynamic, precisely more accurate, and robustly secure,” he says.

Beyond the scope of his project, Ellis sees iPad as revolutionizing the 300-year-old discipline of archaeological fieldwork. “A generation ago computers made it possible for scholars to move away from just looking at pretty pictures on walls and work with massive amounts of information and data. It was a huge leap forward. Using iPad to conduct our excavations is the next one. And I’m really proud to be a part of it.”

More on the Stabia project - http://www.uc.edu/pompeii/

7 comments:

  1. Wow, that's pretty neat. I would probably find this more interesting if I didn't have a personal vendetta against Apple. :D Still, good to see new technology being put to GOOD use!

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  2. Gaby!!!! You shouldn't be reading this. You should be reading trenches and Nazis and Yamamoto and Leni - not Pompeii!!

    No, it's quite interesting really. Isn't it!

    Now what happened between you & Apple???? Were you attacked by an ipod? Or did a macbook fall on you? How do you come to have a 'vendetta' against Apple? Don't get me wrong, I don't think that there is anything better than a good vendetta!!!

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  3. My boyfriend spends a lot of time complaining about macs because he's a computer nerd. I am not allowed to own a mac. He has instilled the hatred in me!
    AND! I spent 4 hours studying today... but not for Modern. I'm doing that tomorrow :D

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  4. LOL I guess we can mention this in 'changing technologies', aye Sir? :P
    I feel sorry for the iPad. LOL, being taken around to all these places, getting dirt and crap on them. LOL. But very innovative and a good use. Hope you enjoy your iPad! I hope you can get Tap Tap on it (Y)

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  5. Worth a couple of lines in 'changing technologies; 4 sure Soph.

    Gabby!!!!!!!! Because of your boyfriend???????????!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Go out now, RIGHT NOW and buy a mac. You MUST assert your independence.

    Interesting, because my middle boy's partner finally bought a mac. When I talked to her today she said she never would because her dad would kill her. Matt convinced her and now she is kicking herself that she didn't get one ages ago.

    Come to the light Gabby! Come to the light!!!!! lol

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  6. My sister has one. I don't really like them in all honesty, I can't play games on them :D
    I CAN'T LISTEN TO YOU AS WELL!
    Conflicting opinions >.<"

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  7. In Gaby's defence, I'm also not a big fan of Apple, as in the company. They take generic parts, dress them up and just throw on a more efficient OS than windows (though, outstripped by any Linux distribution!) and decide to sell their products for ridiculous prices, as well as trying to create a software monopoly through their more recent updates...but I will not deny them praise for their prettiness! And the iPad is a beautiful idea. Definitely some clever marketing going on, but I can't help but be spiteful towards them for cheating their customers. Although, Microsoft is hardly better. >.> But historians and archaeologists aren't generally computer nerds so I guess it doesn't really matter all that much.

    But overall, I'm glad that technology is being put to good use! Hopefully, in future, someone will come up with the bright idea to create a archaeology-focused software suite for some portable device. (And Mac extends her filesystem readability so it can be multi-platform...but that's just wishful thinking.) Now that would save them a LOT of time.

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