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Sarah Parcak

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Name
  
Sarah Parcak

Spouse
  
Greg Mumford

Role
  
Archaeologist


Occupation
  
Assistant Professor, Archaeologist, Egyptologist, Space Archaeologist

Sarah parcak archeology from space


Sarah Helen Parcak (born Bangor, Maine), associate professor of Anthropology and director of the Laboratory for Global Observation at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, is an American archaeologist, space archaeologist, and Egyptologist, who has used satellite imaging to identify potential archaeological sites in Egypt, Rome, and elsewhere in the former Roman Empire. In partnership with her husband, Dr. Greg Mumford, she directs survey and excavation projects in the Fayoum, Sinai, and Egypt's East Delta.

Contents

Sarah Parcak Archaeologist Sarah Parcak discovers lost pyramids and

National geographic live culture heroes sarah parcak


Education

Sarah Parcak Space archeologist39 uses satellites to peer into the past

Parcak received her bachelor's degree in Egyptology and Archaeological Studies from Yale University in 2001 and her Ph.D. from Cambridge University. She is an associate professor of Anthropology in the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB); prior to that she was a teacher of Egyptian art and history at the University of Wales, Swansea.

Career

Sarah Parcak Birmingham Egyptologist Sarah Parcak featured in BBC show

From 2003 to 2004, Parcak used a combination of satellite imaging analysis and surface surveys to search for 132 potential sites of archaeological interest, some dating back to 3,000 B.C.

Sarah Parcak Sarah Parcak Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

In partnership with her husband, Dr. Greg Mumford, she directs Survey and Excavation Projects in the Fayoum, Sinai, and Egypt's East Delta. They have used several types of satellite imagery to look for water sources and possible archaeological sites. According to Parcak, this approach reduces the time and cost for determining archaeological sites compared to surface detection.

In 2007 she founded the Laboratory for Global Health Observation at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

In 2015 she won the $1 million TED Prize for 2016.

Documentaries

In May 2011 the BBC aired a documentary, Egypt's Lost Cities, describing BBC-sponsored research carried out by Parcak's UAB team for over a year using infra-red satellite imaging from commercial and NASA satellites. The programme discussed the research and showed Parcak in Egypt looking for physical evidence. The UAB team announced that they had discovered 17 pyramids, more than 1,000 tombs and 3,000 ancient settlements outside Sa el-Hagar, Egypt. The Minister of State for Antiquities, Zahi Hawass, commented that the sites had not yet been checked and verified by his ministry. As of 2015, none of the pyramids or tombs claimed to have been discovered were verified.

In May 2012 she was the subject of a half-hour program on CNN's The Next List which profiles innovators "who are setting trends and making strides in various fields."

She was the focus of "Rome's Lost Empire", a TV documentary by Dan Snow, first shown on BBC One on 9 December 2012. She prospectively identified several significant sites in Romania, Nabataea, Tunisia, and Italy, including the arena at Portus, the lighthouse and a canal to Rome beside the river Tiber.

Publications

In 2009 her book Satellite Remote Sensing for Archaeology was published by Routledge, describing the methodology of satellite archaeology. A review in Antiquity described it as focusing "more on technical methodology than interpretation and analysis," described Parcak's work as, "written in a lively style that makes a highly technical subject accessible to a general audience," and concluded that it was "a good introduction for undergraduate students of archaeology, anthropology and geography."

References

Sarah Parcak Wikipedia