ncptt archeology training

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8/14/2019 NCPTT archeology training

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ncptt-archeology-training 1/2

 Jne 18-30 2007

A Workshop for Developing Advanced GPS, GIS and Geophysical Skills Through Plantation Archeology

Natchitche, Liiana

Our ability to locate buried features without digging has grown steadily, but so has the technological

learning curve. This workshop will bring you up to date on GIS, GPS, and geophysical prospection skills

(radar, thermal imaging, gradiometry, and conductivity/resistivity). You will learn how to effectively use these

technologies to accomplish your goals in the field and office. Expert instructors will guide you in an intensive

learning experience that integrates concepts, data collection, and analysis, all within the context of a grant-driven

research project in plantation archeology. Learn by doing!

Peented by 

The Natinal Cente

f Peevatin Technlgy 

and Taining

ExPErT INsTruCTors

Steven L. De Vore (M.A. Iowa State)

is an archeologist with the National

Park Service’s Midwest Archeological

Center.

Tommy I. Hailey (Ph.D. Texas

  A&M) is an assistant professor at

Northwestern State University of 

Louisiana.

Bryan S. Haley (M.A. University of 

Mississippi) is the coordinator of re-

mote sensing research at UM’s Center 

for Archaeological Research.

Deidre McCarthy (M.A. Delaware)

works at the National Park Service’s

Cultural Resources GIS Facility.

Kevin C. MacDonald (Ph.D.

Cambridge) is Senior Lecturer in

  African Archeology at University

College London.

David W. Morgan (Ph.D. Tulane) is

Chief of Archeology and Collections

at NCPTT.

GPS, GIS, and Geophysics Workshop (Trimble

Products and ArcGIS 9.2) • June 18-23, 2007Ground Truthing Workshop • June 25-30, 2007

E a c h C o ur se O nl y 

$3 9 9 For further details and convenient registration, visit our website:

WWW.ncPTT.nPS.Govor contact David W. Morgan at (318) 356-7444, david_morgan@nps.gov

Beginning at the modern labs and facilities of the National Center, your learning experience

will be enhanced by use of the discipline’s latest technology and equipment. You will refine

 your skills by collecting and interpreting data from the enigmatic and intriguing Whittington

site (16NA241), the c. 1786-1820 plantation of Marie-Thérèse Coincoin, a free woman of 

African descent considered the matriarch of Louisiana’s Cane River Creoles.

8/14/2019 NCPTT archeology training

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