mararch.blogspot.com
Maritime Archaeology: Piece 3a of the Princes Channel Wreck – week 3
http://mararch.blogspot.com/2009/03/piece-3a-of-princes-channel-wreck-week.html
University of Southern Denmark Maritime Archaeology Programme Student Blog. Monday, 23 March 2009. Piece 3a of the Princes Channel Wreck – week 3. We began our piece of the project by constructing the frames. This was for two reasons, the first more practical reason being that the other teams had begun building the planks first, leaving the tools for building the frames free. The second more theoretical reason was that the Prince’s Channel wreck appears to be a frame-first built ship.
mararch.blogspot.com
Maritime Archaeology: Deep Diving Week, Hemmoor, Germany
http://mararch.blogspot.com/2009/04/deep-diving-week-hemmoor-germany.html
University of Southern Denmark Maritime Archaeology Programme Student Blog. Sunday, 12 April 2009. Deep Diving Week, Hemmoor, Germany. Monday the 30th of March the Maritime Archaeology Programme commercial diving course went to Hemmoor in Northern Germany to spent a week diving in the famous Kreidesee. The Kreidesee is a flooded chalk quarry near Hamburg that was turned into a perfect dive site for divers at all levels. The visibility is fantastic, sometimes more than ten meters. Despite some small hiccu...
mararch.blogspot.com
Maritime Archaeology: Piece 4 of the Princes Channel Wreck – week 5
http://mararch.blogspot.com/2009/04/piece-4-of-princes-channel-wreck-week-5.html
University of Southern Denmark Maritime Archaeology Programme Student Blog. Monday, 6 April 2009. Piece 4 of the Princes Channel Wreck – week 5. Figure 2: Bow section; keel, stem post and three strakes attached. Figure 3: Bow section; keel, stem post and three strakes attached. Marja-Liisa Petrelius Grue and Christian Thomsen. Maritime Archaeology Programme Student Blog. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Maritime Archaeology Programme Student Blog. View my complete profile.
mararch.blogspot.com
Maritime Archaeology: January 2009
http://mararch.blogspot.com/2009_01_01_archive.html
University of Southern Denmark Maritime Archaeology Programme Student Blog. Monday, 5 January 2009. Students at work in Germany Autumn 2008. As students of the essentially practical subject of maritime archaeology and also as commercially qualified divers, the opportunity to work on a professional project came as a welcome prospect. From October to December 2008 students of the Maritime Archaeology Program at SDU Esbjerg too the chance to experience at first hand the nature of the work in which they were...
practicalhistory.wordpress.com
Updated job hunter links | Practical History (a spotter's guide to Cleveland history resources)
https://practicalhistory.wordpress.com/2010/05/06/updated-job-hunter-links
Practical History (a spotter’s guide to Cleveland history resources). Just another WordPress.com weblog. Laquo; Coroner’s verdict list, for COM 326. Updated job hunter links. May 6, 2010 by practicalhistory. Considering this blog is one of the most neglected to be found anywhere, I figured it was time to update and add some links to the history job hunting section (thank you, Adrien! I’ve added some new links, so take a look:. Society of American Archivists. State of Ohio Job Search. You are commenting u...
mararch.blogspot.com
Maritime Archaeology: April 2009
http://mararch.blogspot.com/2009_04_01_archive.html
University of Southern Denmark Maritime Archaeology Programme Student Blog. Thursday, 23 April 2009. Please go to our new blog. To get our latest news. Maritime Archaeology Programme Student Blog. Monday, 20 April 2009. Maritime Archaeology Programme Student Blog. Sunday, 12 April 2009. Deep Diving Week, Hemmoor, Germany. Recording the sailboat (B. Grundvad). Besides gaining experience with dives to 30m, the week in Hemmoor also served as recording and navigation practice. Diving was either tethered ...
mararch.blogspot.com
Maritime Archaeology: We have moved!
http://mararch.blogspot.com/2009/04/we-have-moved.html
University of Southern Denmark Maritime Archaeology Programme Student Blog. Thursday, 23 April 2009. Please go to our new blog. To get our latest news. Maritime Archaeology Programme Student Blog. I would like to thank You for being the member of this website. Please allow me to have the chance to show my satisfaction with Hostgator web hosting. They have professional and instant support and they also offering numerous [url=http:/ ceskeforum.com/viewtopic.php? F=67&t=721 ]Host gator coupons[/url]. Stick ...
mararch.blogspot.com
Maritime Archaeology: March 2009
http://mararch.blogspot.com/2009_03_01_archive.html
University of Southern Denmark Maritime Archaeology Programme Student Blog. Monday, 23 March 2009. Piece 3a of the Princes Channel Wreck – week 3. We began our piece of the project by constructing the frames. This was for two reasons, the first more practical reason being that the other teams had begun building the planks first, leaving the tools for building the frames free. The second more theoretical reason was that the Prince’s Channel wreck appears to be a frame-first built ship. The images show the...
mararch.blogspot.com
Maritime Archaeology: Piece 2 of the Princes Channel Wreck – Week 2
http://mararch.blogspot.com/2009/03/piece-2-of-princes-channel-wreck-week-2.html
University of Southern Denmark Maritime Archaeology Programme Student Blog. Thursday, 12 March 2009. Piece 2 of the Princes Channel Wreck – Week 2. For piece 2 of the Princes Channel Wreck we followed a similar process as piece 1 for the 1:20 scale model of the planks, whereby we used the lines from the digital recording (Rhino software) to trace out the planks and we used 1mm and 2mm cardboard glued together to achieve the appropriate scale thickness. Delia Ní Chíobháin and Andrew Stanek. This blog show...
mararch.blogspot.com
Maritime Archaeology: Piece 3b of the Princes Channel Wreck – week 4
http://mararch.blogspot.com/2009/04/piece-3b-of-princes-channel-wreck-week.html
University of Southern Denmark Maritime Archaeology Programme Student Blog. Monday, 6 April 2009. Piece 3b of the Princes Channel Wreck – week 4. When we made our frames we used the digital archive in Rhino; some of them were not fully recorded, and we did not get all the additional information we needed to make them from sketches or photos either. We had to improvise with some of the pieces by comparing them to others that we had more information about. Maritime Archaeology Programme Student Blog. Briti...
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