Japanese maritime historian and underwater archaeologist Michelle Damian continues her online journal detailing the research and writing of her MA thesis on Japanese wooden boats as depicted in woodblock prints. After completing her first year of PhD studies she is taking the summer to dive back into writing her MA thesis. Her new post shares some of what she has learned over the last year giving readers another peek at how future maritime historians and underwater archaeologists are trained. To view her new post click entry number 8 “Returning” in the left menu. http://www.uri.edu/artsci/his/mua/project_journals/aj/aj_intro.shtml
Also new on the site…
Amer Kahn of Flinders university wraps up his post on training underwater archaeologists in Sri Lanka. Amer worked with UNESCO to train future trainers in that regions efforts to preserve there submerged cultural resources. Select "Final Update" in the left menu to see the wrap up entry here: http://www.uri.edu/artsci/his/mua/project_journals/un/un_intro.shtml
The MUA is proud to spread the word about the important work done in an area of the world that has received little attention in the west.
Up Next…
New projects, training videos for the MUA school kits, and updates from around the world all coming soon. It's going to be a busy summer.
Best regards,
T Kurt Knoerl
Director
The Museum of Underwater Archaeology
http://www.uri.edu/mua
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