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Mapathon Day 03: Digitizing in QGIS

作者adhcadmin
2025年4月1日 01:15

This workshop is about digitizing features from a georeferenced map, which is the second step in creating a GIS map file of the embedded geographic data in a paper map for the purpose of research and analysis. This tutorial follows our tutorial on georeferencing, so if you have not completed that step, check out the previous tutorial. 

As with the Georeferencing tutorial, Digitizing is a complex technical task. This tutorial will focus on the practical steps that you need to take to complete the task. Digitizing is the process of creating GIS layers of the features depicted on a paper map. Using the GIS software QGIS, we will identify features from the georeferenced map and trace them onto a new GIS layer, separating them for later analyses and visualization. 

Below, you will find a series of step by step guides to help you learn this process. When you have completed this tutorial, you will be more familiar with the tasks of Digitizing features on a georeferenced map which will be ready for display. 

The post Mapathon Day 03: Digitizing in QGIS appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

Mapathon Day 02: Georeferencing Maps in QGIS

作者adhcadmin
2025年4月1日 01:11

This workshop is about Georeferencing, which is the first step in our Introduction to GIS series. GIS means “Geographic Information System.” Georeferencing is a very technical activity but we are going to focus on the practical elements that will allow you complete the georeferencing task on a scanned image of a map. 

Georeferencing, in the most simplistic terms, is layering a scanned map (likely a print map that has been scanned and saved as an image file or a pdf file) on top of a satellite map and locating reference points (known as “Ground Control Points”) on both maps in order to align the scanned map accurately with the satellite map. By using as little as three of these Ground Control Points, you can begin to locate the scanned map on the satellite map, which is the first step to creating and embedding geographic data to that map for comparison and analysis. 

The post Mapathon Day 02: Georeferencing Maps in QGIS appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

Mapathon Day 01: QGIS Basics

作者adhcadmin
2025年4月1日 01:02

Tool Description: QGIS is an open source geographic information systems platform that allows users to create maps, edit layers, process and analyze, and share content. As an open source tool, it boasts a large and active user community and 2000+ plugins.

The post Mapathon Day 01: QGIS Basics appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

Storymap Guide 03: Adding Location Slides

作者adhcadmin
2025年2月26日 03:53

Learning Objectives: Create a new Storymap Slide; add a location to a Storymap Slide using an address; add a location to a Storymap Slide using a GIS reference.

The post Storymap Guide 03: Adding Location Slides appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

Digital Storytelling | StoryMapJS

作者adhcadmin
2025年2月18日 23:43

StoryMapJS

Tool Description: StoryMapJS is a free tool developed by Knightlab to help you tell stories on the web that highlight the locations of a series of events. It is a new tool, yet stable in our development environment, and it has a friendly authoring tool.

Guides & Tutorials

The Quick Guides and Interactive Tutorials on this page have been created by the Digital Scholarship team at the University Libraries to help you learn the ins and outs of mapping in QGIS.

Storymap Guide 01: Start a Project

Learning Objectives: Navigate storymap.knightlab.com; sign in with your Google account; and create a new project …

Storymap Guide 02: Adding Content to a Slide

Learning Objectives: create a slide headline; add and format descriptive text; embed media using an image address …

Storymap Guide 03: Adding Location Slides

Learning Objectives: Create a new Storymap Slide; add a location to a Storymap Slide using an address; add a location …

Storymap Guide 04: Share Your Storymap

Learning Objectives: share map with a public URL; share map as an embed on a website; share map by exporting …

Storymap Guide 05: Custom Text Formatting

Learning Objectives: apply html tags to text to create headings; numbered lists, and unnumbered lists; and paragraph breaks …

Storymap Guide 06: Selecting a Map and Changing Your Map Marker

Learning Objectives: change the background map using a different map from the StorymapJS map library; upload a new custom map …

Gallery

Check out examples of projects made with this tool right here on our campus!

Resources

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The post Digital Storytelling | StoryMapJS appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

A Conversation with Rachel Stephens (2.3)

作者adhcadmin
2024年2月17日 06:25

Description

In this episode, Sara talks to Art Historian Rachel Stephens about a number of her Digital Humanities projects, and specifically about her most recent collaborative project, Joe Minter’s African Village.

Season: 2

Episode: 3

Date: 11/03/2023

Presenter: Rachel Stephens

Topic: Documenting Living Artists

Tags: Documentary Research, GIS, Mapping, Southern American Art, Virtual Reality

The post A Conversation with Rachel Stephens (2.3) appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

A Conversation with the Alabama Memory Project (1.3)

作者adhcadmin
2024年2月17日 05:36

During this conversation, Sara Whitver will talk to John Giggie and Isabella Garrison about their Alabama Memory Project. Alabama Memory is an Omeka S documentary archive of the lives of lynched individuals in the state of Alabama. Giggie and Garrison will talk about data collection and methodologies for organizing and presenting data with the goal of telling the lived stories of victims of lynching in Alabama.

Season: 1

Episode: 3

Date: 03/24/2023

Presenter: Dr. John Gggie and Isabella Garrison

Topic: Alabama Memory Project

Tags: Omeka S, History, Primary Sources, Lynching Victims, Mapping

The post A Conversation with the Alabama Memory Project (1.3) appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

Lecture Series: KBR Digital Humanities Online Series

2021年4月26日 12:58

The Royal Library of Belgium (KBR) is hosting an online series of three lectures given by Digital Humanities experts from across Belgium! This series is co-organized by KBR’s two labs: Camille (Center for Archives on the Media and Information) and the Digital Research Lab, in cooperation with Université Libre de Bruxelles and Ghent University. Dealing with a variety of topics, periods and methods, these talks will be held in English, with questions in French, Dutch or English. More information about each of the lectures is provided below. To register for one or all of the lectures, please use this link.

Monday 26 April 13:30 – 15:00h (CEST)

Piraye Hacigüzeller, Assistant Prof of Digital Heritage, University of Antwerp, “Participatory Mapping for Heritage: Theories, Methods and Tools” 

The proliferation of (open) digital geospatial data sets since the 1990s and the simultaneous maturation of tools to display, manage and analyze such data have led to a certain “democratization” of cartographic practices in many disciplines within the social sciences and humanities. This trend was further reinforced by the “maps and power critique”, especially prominent in the 1990s and 2000s in human geography, where the history of Western mapping was critically approached as an instrumental practice in promoting the agendas of powerful individuals, institutions and states. Further supported by a multidisciplinary “participatory turn” over the past decade, the so-called democratization of cartography has sparked an explosion of interest in participatory mapping in many social sciences and humanities disciplines as well as related interdisciplinary fields such as heritage studies. In this lecture I will provide an overview of theories, methods and tools relevant to participatory mapping projects within heritage studies.

Tuesday 25  May 15:00 – 16:30h (CEST)

Chris Tanasescu, Professor & Altissia Chair in Digital Cultures and Ethics, UCLouvain, “Computationally Assembled Collections, Live Archiving, Hybridizing Corpora: Poetry as/of Data”

The talk will analyze the opportunities and challenges of data for/as computational approaches to poetry, with specific references to the #GraphPoem project. The latter deploys natural language processing and graph theory applications in representing, analyzing, and expanding poetry corpora as networks. But where do we find the data for the corpora, and how do we collect and assemble them? In poetry the question becomes even more critical as we deal with both traditional/‘page based’ and digital (or electronic literature) forms and genres. Combining these genres and form(at)s begs for artificial intelligence-informed approaches that treat them specifically, at times on a poem-to-poem basis, while also establishing a foundation for making them cohere into intermedially consistent computationally assembled collections and computationally assembled anthologies. In an alternative scenario, databases are put together collectively as part of interactive coding events such as the ones presented over the past few years as “institute performances” at the Digital Humanities Summer Institute (DHSI). Participants contribute data and run coding scripts assembling, analyzing, and sampling them automatically and feeding them into live-streamed archives with a community performing function. A third relevant data-intensive approach involves corpora that are hybridized by, or submerged into, other corpora both enriching and subverting the ‘original.’ The resulting consolidated data is fed to algorithms that comb the processed neighborhoods of words, lines of verse, stanzas, passages or entire works for probabilistically close replacements and thus output conglomerates of alternative readings and reconfigurations. The conclusion will consider poetry in digital space and media as a possible experimental gateway to tackling the present-day more general challenges related to cataloging, managing, analyzing, and expanding multi and inter-medial data within an analytical-creative framework.

Tuesday 15 June 15:00 – 16:30h (CEST)

Mike Kestemont, Professor Literature and Wouter Haverals, Post Doctoral Researcher, University of Antwerp, Department of Literature, “Silent voices: A Digital Study of the Herne Charterhouse as a Textual Community (ca. 1350-1400)”

The Carthusian monastery of Herne has had a profound impact on the cultural history of the Low Countries, as a true hotspot in the production, negotiation and dissemination of vernacular literature for lay audiences, in a time where most written texts were still in Latin. In a short time span (ca. 1350-1400), the members of the community collectively copied a fantastic collection of 25+ Middle Dutch and Latin manuscripts, many of which contain unique texts. The Herne monks, who took a monastic oath of silence, were unusually productive and modest scribes, as suggested by the remarkable lack of self-attributions in their material. It is somewhat anachronistic therefore that recent literary scholarship has almost exclusively focused on an elusive search for the identification of specific individuals in the monastery (such as the famous Bible translator of 1360). In this project, we propose to study the charterhouse as a tight textual community, driven by a shared goal. To this end, we will focus on the scribal practice in the monastery, as a privileged gateway into the collaborations between the monks. Using stylochronometry we will study the evolution of the copying practice of the individual scribes and convergences therein. Because a significant share of these manuscripts are still inaccessible to the scholarly community, we will apply handwritten text recognition to produce diplomatic transcriptions that scholars can search, analyze and edit further.

To register for these talks, please use this link. Registration is required in order to receive the link to the sessions. Hope to see you all there!

Source: The Digital Humanities Commons blog: Event: KBR Digital Humanities Online Series
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