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Esther Ok

Pre-Sprawl Aerial Images: 'The Next Best Thing to a Time Machine' - 0 views

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    Journalist Emily Badger reports of the Map and Geographic Information Center, a project collaborated between Trinity College and University of Connecticut Libraries exploring the geographic changes Conneticut. Images have been collected and stitched together that allows users to see the drastic changes to the U.S.'s geography, such as the Interstate Highway System before and after World War II. These Aerial images they share reveal surprising facets of urbanization.
Karissa Lienemann

Simulating History- Yellowjacket Software - 0 views

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    Kevin Colton explains how the use of simulation can increase the fundamental learning of history. By using charts, maps, diagrams, and photos, students can get a different and more effective learning experience. He also goes on to explain the basics of how he created the simulation and gives images to give you an idea of what the maps might look like and a demo simulation video.
Michael Hawthorne

Exquisite Corpora - 2 views

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    Exquisite Corpora is a Tumblr page created by the Harvard metaLAB. The participants are to be in teams of three and craft a detailed abstract for a proposal to a scholarly press based on the genre, platform, and audience cards that they received at the metaLAB grad school. Each one Includes one piece of media (an image, audio file, video, interactive piece, etc.) that illustrates their concept. They have 45 minutes to research, discuss, and compose their proposals before they upload it to the Tumblr. These are similar to the lightning talks we discussed in class.
Percila Richardson

Spatial Humanities - 0 views

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    This is an official website for a project being done at the Institute for Enabling Geospatial Scholarship. The area of spatial humanities is very map and image driven. The purpose to produce a better understanding and cultivate new questions that may not have been addresses before mapping.
Matt Barrow

Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media - 0 views

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    This website seeks to make history accessible to an online audience through a series of online exhibits. Topics range from "Imaging the French Revolution" to "The September 11 Digital Archive." The website offers free access to primary sources as well as accompanying teaching modules.
Karissa Lienemann

Renaissance Body Project - 2 views

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    Like the archive websites that we viewed in class, this website is designed to archive material from the Renaissance. There are course related material, such as blogs and lesson plans, there are databases with texts and images from this early time period, and there is a "studio" designed to help writers in their research. There are also external links for any other sites that are wished to view. An archive website is useful for research and Stanford University designed this one for research purposes and informational value.
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