快活视频

Skip to main content

Aerial technology breaks new ground in ancient Greece

by Jennifer Johnson,

Faragi kouros

鈥淐onducted innovative drone and field reconnaissance projects in Europe鈥 is now a line Logan Banks 鈥24 can add to her resume.聽聽

In June, she was among five Willamette students who spent six weeks in Athens and the island of Naxos to improve their understanding of marble use and extraction in ancient Greece.聽

GreeceFunded by a National 快活视频 Foundation grant and led by Professor of Environmental 快活视频 and Archaeology Scott Pike, the group was the first of three cohorts to earn the opportunity to conduct joint and independent research there every summer until 2024.聽

Despite the historical significance of the quarries they visited 鈥 some were the source of Greece鈥檚 most famous monuments 鈥 little is known of the areas. Hundreds of aerial and ground footage captured by students, run through a mapping software, will help develop more accurate 3D models of the quarries as a basis for future research.聽

Banks, an archaeology and environmental science double major, called the trip life changing.聽

鈥淚t sounds so cliche,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut I would have never imagined being able to do something like this.鈥澛

For her project, Banks wanted to know whether the extent of vegetative growth could indicate relative age of the quarry walls. She studied the quarries at Mt. Pentelikon, a location northeast of Athens famous for providing marble for the Parthenon and the Acropolis.聽

A multispectral sensor attached to the drone she used records narrow wavelength bands of visible and infrared light, so when she ran the images through the software, she could differentiate the presence of specific vegetation 鈥 lichen, shrubs, trees 鈥 as well as dry earth and rock surfaces.聽聽聽

Multispectral image analysis is commonly used in farming and agriculture, but this is the first time it鈥檚 been used in ancient quarry studies.聽

While Banks didn鈥檛 find a direct correlation between vegetation and age, 鈥渋t鈥檚 always nice to try to find new methods of discovering how the ancient world was created,鈥 she said.聽

CJ Lane 鈥23, an anthropology and archaeology double major, shot photos of unfinished kouroi聽 鈥 a kouros is a statue of nude youth 鈥 located in Naxos quarries. In the village of Melanes, two kouroi are believed to have been cracked while in transport and abandoned during the move. Another kouros, situated on the north shore of Naxos in the village of Apollonas, was abandoned during its carving and is still attached to the rock.聽

Flerio melanes kouros
Melanes kouros. Above photo: faragi Kouros.

Lane was trying to figure out what could have happened to the kouros. In the process, he became more fascinated by marble than he would have ever thought, he said.聽

In addition to their research, students explored the country, formed connections with industry experts and visited the Wiener Laboratory of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, of which Willamette is a member.聽

鈥淭he trip was a one-way ticket to an amazing grad program,鈥 said Lane. 鈥淭ruly the best opportunity I could ever ask for.鈥澛

Related Stories

View All
Willamette University

Molly Mendoza BFA鈥14 receives prestigious Caldecott Honor for their stunning work in a picture book

09.18.2024 | Sophie Cipolla

The acclaimed illustrator, who honed their storytelling skills at PNCA, was recognized for their work in Jovita Wore Pants: The Story of a Mexican Freedom Fighter

Willamette University

Helping to shape the future of K-12 data science curriculum

09.18.2024 | Melanie Moyer

As part of the DSE-K12 Launch Collective, Colleen Smyth BA鈥15 MS鈥21 strives to bring data science education to more students.

Willamette University

A leader and connector for Latinx, farmworker, and migrant communities in the Mid-Willamette Valley

09.18.2024 | University Communications

Jaime Arredondo BA鈥05 is committed to educating, serving, and connecting the community and living out Willamette鈥檚 beloved motto.

Willamette University

University Communications

Address
Waller Hall, Fourth Floor
Willamette University
900 State Street
Salem Oregon 97301 U.S.A.