(upbeat music)
And you would link to it,
and you can look at the images
of all the different artifacts.
So basically this is a web application
that's optimized for mobile viewing.
I did it for the National Park Service.
I was really fortunate enough to get an internship.
My research is mostly based in Ohio,
particularly the Ohio Hopewell culture.
It was excavated in the late 1800s.
And so I'm working with the field museum
to bring together a lot of the data that was collected,
a lot of artifacts, and put it back into the site,
and understand how people excavated,
and then drive new interpretations.
I chose Nebraska particularly for digital
culture heritage applications.
I've been able to learn a lot of tools like
photogrammetry, creating 3-D visual models.
Once it was in the GIS and you bring it into Sketchup...
My anthropology degree, I think will take me
either into the public sector.
A lot of working with museums,
developing cultural heritage applications.
Also working for the National Park Service.
(laughs) OK.
And I think it's a very collaborative atmosphere.
I mean, I work a lot with professors,
I have several kind of advisors.
The departments supports my goals by providing
feedback, by offering me opportunities
as a graduate teaching assistant,
and also providing a community of other students
who are kind of living the same life as you.
