This research stream focuses on natural, unnatural and archaeological patterns using sophisticated geospatial mapping technologies across landscapes and beneath the earth’s surface. The research stream has been designed by a team of four professors: ( Carl Lipo, Departments of Geology and Anthropology, Director of Environmental Studies Alex Nikulin and Jeffrey Pietras, Department of Geology and Matthew Sanger, Department of Anthropology, Director of the Public Archaeology MA Program) and is led by Research Assistant Professor Timothy de Smet. Geospatial images documented these phenomena. Environmental visualizations have changed our understanding of human impact on Earth - for example, the Ozone Hole over Antarctica due to CFCs, and the Great Pacific Garbage Patch discovered in 1988.
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