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This is a collection about science and technology innovations in the field of historic preservation.
Today we join NCPTT's Jason Church as he speaks with Marshall Millet, owner of Mmars 4-D to discuss Millet's work with U.C. Davis and the KeckCAVES visualization facility.
Today we join NCPTT's Jenny Hay as she speaks with Jill Cowley, Historic Landscape Architect for the Intermountain Region of the National Park Service.
Reedy serves as Director of the Laboratory for Analysis of Cultural Materials in the Center for Historic Architecture and Design at the University of Delaware. Today we are talking to Chandra about the importance of thin section petrography for conservation.
Today we join NCPTT's Jenny Hay as she speaks with Cindy Brandimarte, Director of the Historic Sites and Structures Program in the State Parks Division of the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department. In the first installment of this two-part series, they'll talk about the iconic landscape of the Civilian Conservation Corps and their role in the development of the Texas State Park system.
Dr. Diana Greenlee, adjunct assistant professor at the University of Louisiana at Monroe and station archaeologist at the Poverty Point National Monument, discusses dendrogeomorphology to investigate earthwork stability at Poverty Point.
Steven Gonzales, Executive Director of the El Camino Real de los Tejas National Historic Trail Association, discusses the curriculum development and trail stewardship projects being supported by the “America’s Best Ideas” grant.
Derek Patton, Assistant Professor in the School of Polymers and High Performance Materials at The University of Southern Mississippi, discusses a National Science Foundation grant to advance the science of stone preservation.
Tony Rajer, Art Conservator with the Nek Chand Foundation and a conservation professor at the University of Wisconsin, discusses his interest in folk art and his work with the Rock Garden in Chandigarh, India.
Robert Melnick, professor of landscape architecture at the University of Oregon and author of the article, “Climate Change and Landscape Preservation: A Twenty-first-century Conundrum", discusses topics addressed in the article.
Join the National Park Service’s 19th Annual Geophysics and the Technology of Archeology workshop at Los Adaes. Non-destructive techniques to locate archeological features are discussed.