The Giza Project began in 2000 at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston,
with the goal of digitizing all of the archaeological documentation from the
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston – Harvard University expedition to Giza, Egypt
(circa. 1904-1947) and making that information freely available online for
anyone to use. Since moving to Harvard in 2011, the Project has expanded its
scope, partnering with other institutions around the world that excavated at
Giza, to bring together as much data as possible about this complex site. The
process of integrating and standardizing all of these records is ongoing.
In addition, the Project has utilized this vast quantity of
information to begin building a 3D virtual reconstruction of the Giza Plateau
as it may have looked when first built, providing new ways to sightsee,
explore, and learn about the pyramids and their surrounding cemeteries. To
date, we have modeled approximately 20 tombs and monuments in detail, with many
hundreds more still to be done.
With support from the National Endowment for the Humanities, we are
currently developing Digital Giza, a website which seeks to integrate this
virtual environment with more than a hundred years of scholarly research about
Giza, using cutting edge technology to study the distant past and preserve
knowledge about this important cultural heritage site for the future. We
continue to explore and develop new interactive ways to experience ancient
Giza, including virtual and augmented reality apps, 3D printing of ancient artifacts,
and online teaching initiatives.
http://giza.fas.harvard.edu/about/#0
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