Virtual Calakmul: Interface Technology for World Heritage Preservation
Calakmul (pronounced kah-lock-MOOL) is an important ancient
Mayan metropolis set deep in the forest of a national reserve in the
Mexican State of Campeche. Although Calakmul was one of the most
powerful Mayan cities, it was discovered by archeologists relatively
recently (1931), and is still being explored. In 2002 Calakmul was
added to UNESCO's list of World Heritage Sites. Because of its
relative isolation, Calakmul and its artifacts are prime candidates for
VR reconstruction for public presentation and
education.
The Virtual Calakmul project is developing new tools for making World
Heritage sites such as Calakmul more accessible to both the public and
he scientific community.
Demonstrations
Several
works-in-progress illustrate concepts in virtual heritage
preservation:
Calakmul Artifacts Magic Book shows
high-resolution 3D reconstructions of several artifacts and
describes their context within one of the primary structures, a
tomb in Structure II.
Calakmul
Guided Tour presents a VRML flythrough of the site
structures, with building labels and positional triggers for
advancing automatically through the site model.
Calakmul
Transition Pointer allows the user to transition to an
arbitrary egocentric position anywhere within the site model by
using an ARToolkit-tracked pointer within the exocentric view.
Calakmul
Astronomical Viewpoints shows the relation between various
viewpoints within the central (E-Structure) building complex and
the movement patterns of the sun and stars.
Calakmul
Animal Agents explores the use of naturally-behaving virtual
agents based on the indigenous animals of Calakmul (e.g., jaguars
and deer).
Research Partners
We have assembled a multi-institutional team of researchers in Mexico
and the United States with broad expertise in the areas of
human-computer interface, intelligent agents, and virtual architectural
design:
Rocio Ruiz Rodarte (Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Unidad
Azcapotzalco) – Project PI
Jesus Savage Carmona (Intelligent Interfaces Lab, Universidad Nacional
Autónoma de México)
Chris Byrne (Cascadia College, Bothell)
Colin Sprague (Computational Linguistics, University of
Chicago)
The
research team also works closely with the chief archeologist at
Calakmul (Ramon Carrasco) and with the Mexican National Institute of
Anthropology and History (INAH).
Contacts
Suzanne Weghorst <weghorst
u.washington.edu>