| Ah,
the museum visit. The bustling crowds, the aching feet, the skulking Bohemians, the
screeching kids, the sticky fingers, the repressed, would-be paleontologists singing
contagious little musical numbers. You know you love it! |
Throughout the 1999 - 2000 academic year, students
enrolled in Anthropology 3710 will be working tirelessly to catalog, photograph,
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design an online dimension to the C. E. Smith Museum of Anthropology which will be accessible on the web at any time by professionals, students, and the merely curious.
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| During Fall Quarter, 1999 students in Anthro 3710
converted the museum gallery on the 4th floor of Meiklejohn Hall into a temporary
virtual reality workshop with the installation of digital cameras, lighting equipment,
a virtual reality object apparatus, and several Macintosh computers. Most of the
Fall work was experimental and devoted to climbing the rather steep technology learning
curve but a few of the pilot projects can be seen here and on the following pages.
The Winter, 2000 class will refine and enlarge upon the work pioneered in the Fall. |
In addition to simple browsing of the catalogue, once
the project is complete online visitors will be able to sort and select subsets of
the collection by geographical location, ethnicity, type of artifacts, etc. And thanks
to the wonders of digital virtual reality visitors also will be able to "pick
up" many of the artifacts and examine them from all angles as you will see on
the following pages. The students chose to focus their work on just three of the museum's many collections. |
![]() For a virtual peek at the museum's African collection click this link. For a preview of our Precolumbian collection click here. In order to examine a few of the artifacts from the Gold Rush era ship Rome, click here. |
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