Sept/Oct 2000

Written by Susan Lonkevich,

Assistant Editor

Roman Corinth: They Came, They Saw, They Digitized
ARCHAEOLOGY

Top: A colored image of the area northwest of Corinth on the Corinthian Gulf, from an aerial photograph. Bottom: Looking south at the Odeum at Corinth.

What do you get when you cross Roman ruins with modern-day computer technology and painstakingly precise surveying data? An archaeological Web site that boasts almost as many special effects as the blockbuster Gladiator. Like Rome, the Corinth Computer Project—directed by Dr. David Gilman Romano Gr’81 CGS’99 —wasn’t built in a day. Romano, keeper of the Mediterranean section of the University Museum and adjunct associate professor of classical studies, set out a dozen years ago to study and map the orientation of one building to one road in the ancient colony of Corinth on the northeastern Peloponnesus of Greece. Since then, his modest project has expanded—with the help of some 70 Penn undergraduate and graduate students —to a “stone-for-stone” computerized drawing of the entire excavated city of Roman Corinth, along with features of the land for miles around. The results can be viewed at (http://corinth .sas.upenn.edu); a book and CD-ROM will eventually follow.
“I don’t think any other project of this kind has this much data about a city, in terms of a digital record, all linked together,” Romano says. The map on the Web site offers information on the chronology, function and physical characteristics of everything from drainpipes to altars to mosaics.

“The accuracy is in the centimeter-to-millimeter range because of the field work that’s been done,” says Nicholas Stapp GFA’00, who has served as Romano’s research associate since 1995 and oversees his lab. The surveys of every above-ground monument—aided by a laser-equipped device known as an “electronic total station”—have been combined with pre-existing archaeological plans and other data to produce a precise and seamless plan of the city.

Corinth, a Greek port city which once rivaled Athens in size and power, was destroyed by the Romans in 146 B.C. One hundred and two years later, the Romans, led by Julius Caesar, founded a new city on top of the old. The ruins have been under excavation for the past century. First posted this past spring, the Web site has received more than 11,000 hits, drawing the attention of major scientific institutions, archaeology scholars and the occasional fifth-grader. It was highlighted in the April issue of Science magazine.

Visitors to the Web site can find three-dimensional models of the remains of what may be one of the oldest amphitheaters of the Roman world, where gladiators and bears once performed. After “flying” over the city to get a sense of its terrain, they can step into the forum as it exists today by using a 360-degree photographic panorama. Stapp is also working on a digital video tour of the site, along with a gallery of interior 3-D photographic panoramas, and promises that the result will be “a major armchair-tourist” experience.

Depending on their interests, Stapp says, visitors to the site can turn on and off layers of information. “If you are a scholar interested in studying city planning, for example, you could go to our site, filter everything out but the drainage material and see what the waterworks was [like] for this ancient city.”

Over the summer, Romano and his students embarked on a new computer-mapping project in the Mugello Valley of Tuscany, in conjunction with an Italian university. His long-term goal is to create a research center that can continue this kind of work at different archaeological sites around the world in affiliation with the University Museum and several schools at Penn. He also has been promoting the idea of creating a master’s program in mapping and field archaeology to acquaint students with technology like Geographic Information Systems software and remote sensing.

The significance of such tools is evidenced by Romano’s discovery of a second Roman colony at Corinth, founded between 70 and 80 A.D. during the reign of Vespasian. “That all comes from remote sensing and the creation of precise digitized maps,” he notes. ”We wouldn’t have been able to do this without computers.”

And while he doesn’t foresee such methods replacing old-fashioned pick-and-shovel work, Romano firmly believes that the new digital tools he and his colleagues have created will be “extremely valuable” to future archaeologists.

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Susan Lonkevich's e-mail address is lonkevich@ben.dev.upenn.edu