WORKING DIGITALLY
WITH HISTORICAL MAPS
(1) BUILDING RICH RESOURCES (10:00 am – 11:40 am)
- Max Edelson (Virginia): The “New Map of Empire” Project: Enhancing Cartography Scholarship with Dynamic Online Collections
- Joseph Hurley (Georgia State): Visualizing Neighborhood Change: The Georgia State University Library Digital Map Collection, “Planning Atlanta: A New City in the Making, 1950s – 1980s”
- Michael Page (Emory): Modeling the History of the City using Library Resources
- Marcel A Fortin (Toronto) The Don Valley Historical Mapping Project
- John Cloud (National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration): Starting from Hassler’s Primary Triangle: The survey of the coast in “New York Bay and Harbor and the Environs” as the foundation for geo-spatial data for North America
(2) ENABLING ACCESS (12.40 – 2.20 pm)
- Julie Sweetkind-Singer (Stanford): Digital Philanthropy: Increasing Access through Donor Collaboration
- Matt Knutzen (New York Public Library): Open Historical Map
- Bonnie Burns (Harvard) OpenGeoportal: A Collaborative Geographic Search Tool
- Meredith Westington/Keith Bridge (National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration): The Value of a Bounding Box: Moving Historical Charts beyond the Image Browser
- Gregory J Allord (US Geological Survey): USGS Historical Topographic Map Collection: Converting and Integrating lithographic maps into The National Map
(3) EXTRACTING AND DEFINING FEATURES (2.40 – 4.20 pm)
- James Burt (US Geological Survey): Efficient Geo-referencing of Small-scale Scanned Map Images
- Richard Marciano (North Carolina): Connecting People, Past, and Place: exploring semi-automated extraction of text and polygons from common historic sources
- Andrea White (University of New Orleans) Creating an Archaeological Sensitivity Model for New Orleans using Historic Maps and Historical GIS
- Anne Leonard (New York City College of Technology) Using old maps and new methods to discover the early chemical and petroleum industries of Newtown Creek
- Stuart Macdonald (University of Edinburgh) Addressing History – Crowdsourcing the Past
(4) DIGITAL GAZETTEERS (4.40 – 5.40 pm)
- Merrick Berman (Harvard) Historical Gazetteer Development and Integration: CHGIS, Regnum Francorum, and GeoNames
- Raj Singh (Open Geospatial Consortium) Establishing a Global Data Sharing Framework for Place Names
- Ashley Holt (National Geospatial intelligence Agency) Gazetteer representation of place name usage
(5) KEYNOTE: FINDING AND REFERENCING OLD MAPS ONLINE (6 – 7 pm)
This joint presentation will demonstrate and launch a new global search portal for digitised historical maps: Old Maps OnlinePresenters:
David Rumsey (Cartography Associates)
Humphrey Southall (Univ of Portsmouth – Great Britain Historical GIS)
Petr Pridal (Klokan Technologies)
Note that the New York Public Library building closes at 6pm. Those wishing to attend this session must arrive by 5:45pm to be admitted to the building. The keynote is followed by a reception for the speakers at the workshop and other invited guests.
Session Organizers:
Humphrey Southall (GB Historical GIS, University of Portsmouth)
Matt Knutzen (New York Public Library)
Lex Berman (Center for Geographic Analysis, Harvard University)
Sponsors:
New York Public Library
Cartography Associates
Old Maps Online
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