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USF Researchers Use High-Tech Tools To Help Determine Age Of Old Shipwreck

When the hull of a ship believed to be from the 1700's or 1800's washed up on shore on Ponte Vedra Beach Easter weekend, one of the first groups to be called in to help preserve it was the University of South Florida Libraries Digital Heritage and Humanities Collections.

"This was part of a collaborative that we've been developing with the Division of Historical Resources out of Tallahassee," said director Lori Collins. "It's part of our state cultural resource group that protects and preserves these kinds of things."

But while other groups tried to save the actual ship, the DHHC preserved it virtually.

Extended University Beat report on the "virtual preservation" work the University of South Florida Libraries Digital Heritage and Humanities Collections did on a Ponte Vedra shipwreck.

University Beat has previously profiled Collins and the DHHC for its work using 3-D scanning and other technology to capture historical sites, as well as a Land O' Lakes sinkhole

"It's kind of interesting to look at (a site) through the digital lens because I think that we are able to see things that we can't perceive when we're in front of an object," Collins said. "And that to me is probably the most exciting because we're making discoveries, but they're digital discoveries."

https://youtu.be/hbtvm7F9Tgg

(video courtesy WJCT, produced by Carlos Bovier)

A 3D scanner captures a portion of the shipwreck.
USF Libraries Digital Heritage and Humanities Collections /
A 3D scanner captures a portion of the shipwreck.
A completed scan of a portion of the shipwreck.
USF Libraries Digital Heritage and Humanities Collections /
A completed scan of a portion of the shipwreck.

Copyright 2018 WUSF Public Media - WUSF 89.7

Mark Schreiner has been the producer and reporter for "University Beat" on WUSF 89.7 FM since 2001 and on WUSF TV from 2007-2017.