Sarah Parcak

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Sarah Helen Parcak (born 1979 in Bangor, Maine) is an assistant professor of anthropology at UAB, renowned as a "space archaeologist" for her pioneering use of satellite-based sensing technology to identify ancient sites and detect the activities of looters.

Parcak completed a bachelor's degree in near Eastern languages and civilizations at Yale University in 2001 and a Master's and Ph.D in Egyptian archaeology from Trinity College at Cambridge, where she also played on the varsity football (soccer) team.

Parcak taught Egyptian art and history at the University of Wales in Swansea before coming to Birmingham. She and her husband, Greg Mumford, have directed survey and excavation projects in Fayoum, the Sinai Peninsula, and the Nile's East Delta. Infra-red imagery from commercial and NASA satellites assisted in locating water sources and potential sites. The UAB team claimed discovery of seventeen pyramids, more than 1,000 tombs and 3,000 settlements in the vicinity of Sa el-Hagar. The Egyptian Ministry of State for Antiquities has not yet verified those claims.

The UK's BBC network funded some of that research, which was publicized in the 2011 documentary Egypt: What Lies Beneath. Her techniques were also featured in a 2012 documentary Rome's Lost Empire, which revealed the discovery of several sites in Romania, Nabetaea, Tunisia and Italy, including an arena at Portus and a lighthouse and canal paralleling the Tiber river.

In 2007 Parcak founded the Laboratory for Global Observation at UAB. In 2015 Parcak was awarded the $1 million TED Prize from the New York-based Sapling Foundation.

Publications

Parcak, Sarah (2009) Satellite Remote Sensing for Archaeology. London: Routledge ISBN 0415448786

References

  • Blumenthal, Ralph and Tom Mashburg (November 8, 2015) "TED Prize Goes to Archaeologist Who Combats Looting With Satellite Technology." The New York Times
  • "Sarah Parcak" (November 5, 2015) Wikipedia - accessed November 9, 2015

External links