
rows = 0;
document.write('<table class="jstable" style="font-size: 90%; line-height: 1.4em;">');document.write('<tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=085acf6dad468c083eb605f20fcb5304868516a6"/></div><a target="_new" href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/3274/reftype_renderer/89448" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Australian Paliochora-Kythera Archaeological Survey (APKAS)</a>  ( 2005 - )<br/><br/>The Australian Paliochora-Kythera Archaeological Survey (APKAS) seeks to investigate the broad question of the relationship between fortified centres and their hinterlands in the Byzantine period, testing alternative hypotheses for site location and the factors influencing occupation and abandonment of sites. The project focuses on the abandoned site of Paliochora (mediaeval Agios Demetrios) on the island of Kythera, mid-way between the Peloponnesos and Crete<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;document.write('<tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=842badcf986c0a9e348b9ec28e8366fdf36312e7"/></div><a target="_new" href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/3274/reftype_renderer/59026" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Borders of Arabia and Palaestina</a>  ( 2006 - 2010 )<br/>Dr Kate da Costa<br/>Although the functioning of the Roman Empire depended on the administration of its provinces, not one ancient source tells us the basis upon which territory was assigned to one or another. This project, combining mapping technology and archaeological evidence from settlements in Palaestina/Arabia, will develop an innovative methodology to accurately define, for the first time, the location of Roman provincial borders. The project aims to clarify economic, social and political decisions behind territorial allocation, and document change in the critical transitional Late Antique period when the Old World evolved from Graeco-Roman imperium to the mediaeval Christian West and Islamic East.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;document.write('<tr><td><a target="_new" href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/3274/reftype_renderer/89445" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Central Australia Archaeology Project (CAAP)</a>  ( 1992 - )<br/>A/Prof. Judy Birmingham<br/>The Central Australia Archaeology Project is a research program developed by Judy Birmingham and Andrew Wilson from Sydney University\'s School of Archaeology. Since 1992 it has located and investigated archaeological sites from Adelaide to Darwin, identifying and recording evidence of Aboriginal-European interaction during the last stage of the European invasion of Australia.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;document.write('<tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=452ab888c616f5a913e27472c2f078eda925f4b0"/></div><a target="_new" href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/3274/reftype_renderer/144360" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">ECAI: Electronic Cultural Atlas Initiative</a>  ( 1998 - )<br/><br/>A centralised, collaborative metadata catalogue, spatial search and spatio-temporal mapping system for distributed cultural spatial datasets. This project broke new ground by pioneering a ‘Web 2.0’ collaborative approach to distributed data collection, a decade before these techniques became commonplace.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;document.write('<tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=675f080463f8fc775a477c78ca3db70acd5962c9"/></div><a target="_new" href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/3274/reftype_renderer/233" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Greater Angkor Project (GAP)</a>  ( 2002 - 2014 )<br/>Prof. Roland John Fletcher<br/>Investigating the relationship between the vast extent of Angkor from the twelfth to the sixteenth centuries CE, land clearance and regional ecological impacts that may have played a part in its decline.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;document.write('<tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=c6636970f43f6e79c08c202278fce4c6cc478876"/></div><a target="_new" href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/3274/reftype_renderer/89440" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Historical Archaeological Investigations at Regentville</a>  ( 1999 - )<br/><br/>For more than twenty years archaeologists from Sydney University have studied the site of this important colonial mansion. Over the last fifteen years it has been investigated intensively as part of a project designed to improve archaeological methods, teach students practical skills and bring archaeology to the general public.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;document.write('<tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=8f2eefbfa38170f070def5d5236d30697e0d38b7"/></div><a target="_new" href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/3274/reftype_renderer/89523" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Khmer TimeMap Animation</a>  ( 2005 - )<br/>Prof. Roland John Fletcher<br/><br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;document.write('<tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=d0b8f901bbba99c4073c995815f0d60cb805f076"/></div><a target="_new" href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/3274/reftype_renderer/89526" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Korea TimeMap</a>  ( 2005 - )<br/>Prof. Roland John Fletcher<br/>An electronic atlas of the history of Korea. A pilot study of the Shilla kingdom in the 1st millennium AD.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;document.write('<tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=773fc7ed8045014e8d2ba5083897d48c3ce77c37"/></div><a target="_new" href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/3274/reftype_renderer/80" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Living with Heritage (LWH)</a>  ( 2005 - 2009 )<br/>Prof. Roland John Fletcher, Dr Eleanor Bruce, Ian Johnson<br/>A versatile GIS based monitoring system for Angkor to track, visualise and compare change over time enabling heritage policies to achieve sustainable development integrated with community needs and aspirations.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;document.write('<tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=f108303c01d79201b68c221da529a7120a8b4297"/></div><a target="_new" href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/3274/reftype_renderer/89688" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Paramatta Historical and Archaeological Landscape Management Study (PHALMS)</a>  ( 2000 - 2004 )<br/><br/>The Paramatta Historical and Archaeological Landscape Management Study (PHALMS) was launched in February 2000 by the NSW Government with the overall objective of seeing Parramatta\'s significant archaeological heritage incorporated into plans for the city\'s future development. In a pioneering project involving two levels of government and the property community, Parramatta\'s archaeological remains have been surveyed and a framework developed for their future management.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;document.write('<tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=7de89e40db70bdea41a92220594a0641ab4d425c"/></div><a target="_new" href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/3274/reftype_renderer/105220" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Picturing change: 21st Century perspectives on recent Australian rock art, especially that from the European contact period</a>  ( 2008 - 2011 )<br/>Prof. Paul S. Tacon, June Ross, Dr Alistair Paterson, Dr Sally May<br/>Australia will now also be known for its unique and diverse body of contact rock art. This project will benefit tourism in remote regions, many of which are or are near World Heritage Areas. Contemporary indigenous knowledge about important cross-cultural landscapes will be synthesised along with other new knowledge to assist with the protection of sites and their inclusion in a new World Heritage rock art list. Aboriginal participants and communities will reconnect to significant remote places<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;document.write('<tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=fdf02b1e931b7a059608ebb044fb305b8d96c3ba"/></div><a target="_new" href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/3274/reftype_renderer/106870" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Research data management : fish-bones</a>  ( - - )<br/><br/>A collaboration with Dr. Sarah Colley to establish digital preservation processes for her research data. The project will also provide Sarah with a secure online space for cross-institutional collaboration with her research partners and assistance in assessing requirements for the selection/creation/implementation of flexible tools for interrogating and manipulating her data." - Sydney eScholarship DPA website<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;document.write('<tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=17ddf5ef0b5aa482041e4b3866cc26bc0d7eb0c1"/></div><a target="_new" href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/3274/reftype_renderer/57270" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Sydney TimeMap</a>  ( 1999 - 2001 )<br/>Ian Johnson, Prof. Roland John Fletcher<br/>The Sydney TimeMap project used the TimeMap methodology and software to present the history of Sydney in an innovative, entertaining interactive kiosk at the Museum of Sydney.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;document.write('<tr><td><div style="float: right;"><img src="http://heuristscholar.org/heurist/php/resize_image.php?file_id=8559d304ac3fdae11f5260f24f2b943804059eaa"/></div><a target="_new" href="http://sylvester.acl.arts.usyd.edu.au/cocoon/heurist/3274/reftype_renderer/89515" onclick="window.open(href,\'\',\'scrollbars=1,resizable=yes, width=600,height=500\'); return false;">Syria Mapping</a>  ( 2005 - )<br/><br/>This project was undertaken for the Australian ambassador to Israel, Mr Ross Burns, as part of his project of documenting and mapping archaeological sites in Syria. Previously, no workable background map of the country existed in digital form. The Soviet Union, however, had produced a series of 49 paper topographic maps throughout the 1980s and 1990s. This digital mosaic was assembled from high-quality scans of those maps. It\'s still possible to make out the originals by minor differences in colour and legend -- these maps were produced over a period of decades and Soviet map-making techniques changed over time. The mosaic is geocoded, meaning the map is \'aware\' of its geographic location in a GIS, and vector datasets containing other information about Syria (ancient road networks, settlements, archaeological sites, political boundaries and so on) will overlay correctly in a GIS application and maintain their correct location and scale even as the user zooms in and out of the image. This work highlights the creative and analytical potential that can be achieved with GIS applications. If it were confined to the medium of paper, this map mosaic would span over a hundred square metres and would remain practically independent of any other datasets except those which were marked on the map by hand or printed onto a transparency at the same scale and projection. It would be impractical, full of fold marks and quickly torn and destroyed. In its digital form the user can zoom out to this scale for an overview or instantly zoom in close enough to make out street corners in Syrian villages. Everything from digital photographs to oral history recordings can be embedded within specific locations on the map and accessed with a click of a mouse.<br/><br/></td></tr>'); ++rows;
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