Graeme Earl is Professor of Digital Humanities and Vice Dean of External Relations. He studied and worked as an archaeologist, and became increasingly fascinated by the ways in which cultural heritage and digital technologies collide. Since then he has worked on a broad range of archaeological, digital humanities, digital economy and web science projects.
Since 2005 his activities have focused on the port of Imperial Rome, as co-director of the Portus Project – experimenting with different forms of digital humanities research and teaching, including imaging, interaction design, online learning design, augmented and virtual reality, computer vision, accessibility, research repositories, electronic publication, geographic information systems, survey and remote sensing.
Theatre and Performance Publications
Articles and Book Chapters
Spatial Narratives in Museums and Online : The Birth of the Digital Object Itinerary. / Dunn, Stuart Edale; Earl, Graeme Peter; Wootton, William Thomas; Foka, Anna.Springer Series on Cultural Computing. Springer, 2019. p. 253-271 (Springer Series on Cultural Computing).