kgeographer.com
Some recent projects | kgeographer
http://kgeographer.com/wp/projects
Karl Grossner, PhD. Role: co-investigator and lead developer. The Authorial London project is compiling and mapping references to places within London found in works by writers who have lived there. It has been developed as the first instance of a re-usable platform we call, Authorial {X}. Our intent is that researchers and college instructors may readily instantiate a similar site for any place of interest, and engage either a class or research community of interest in gathering data for it. By simulati...
kgeographer.com
CV | kgeographer
http://kgeographer.com/wp/cv
Karl Grossner, PhD. Doctor of Philosophy in Geography, University of California, Santa Barbara, December, 2010. Representing Historical Knowledge in Geographic Information Systems. Supervised by Michael F. Goodchild. Bachelor of Science in Instructional Technology, California State University, Chico, June 2005,. Digital Humanities Research Developer,. Center for Interdisciplinary Digital Research. Stanford University Libraries, January 2012 – present. Research Specialist, Center for Spatial Studies,.
news.stanford.edu
Stanford scholar digs deep into human history at Neolithic site
http://news.stanford.edu/news/2015/august/hodder-neolithic-dig-080715.html
August 7, 2015. Stanford scholar digs deep into human history at Neolithic site. Stanford archaeologist Ian Hodder is unraveling the origins of the human story at the 9,000-year-old Neolithic site of Çatalhöyük in central Turkey. By Clifton B. Parker. The Neolithic site at Catalhoyuk in central Turkey is one of the world’s most ambitious archaeological excavation projects. (Image credit: Jason Quinlan). Since 1993, Stanford archaeologist Ian Hodder. Discovering how people lived thousands of years ago can...
catalhoyuk.com
Çatalhöyük Research Project | Excavations of a neolithic anatolian höyük
http://www.catalhoyuk.com/index.html
Skip to main content. Northeast platform in building 77 (Photo: Jason Quinlan). The visualization team plans new exhibits in the experimental house (Photo: Sara Perry). Overall view of the dig house of Çatalhöyük (Photo: Jason Quinlan). The team forms a human chain to remove soil from the south area (Photo: Jason Quinlan). An obsidian mirror found in the north area (Photo: Jason Quinlan). Uncovered bulls head from the northeast platform in building 77 (Photo: Jason Quinlan). Submitted by Sara Perry.
shc.stanford.edu
Digital Humanities | Stanford Humanities
http://shc.stanford.edu/digital-humanities
Skip to main content. Home of the Human Experience. Humanities Digital Tools: Grave Reform in Modern China. Video of Humanities Digital Tools: Grave Reform in Modern China. Grave Reform in Modern China. Grave Reform in Modern China harnesses humanities scholarship and digital tools to analyze and narrate the story of funeral reform and grave relocation. Watch this video or scroll through to see other videos. Humanities Digital Tools: Geography of the Post. Geography of the Post. Video of Humanities Digit...