ELECTRONIC CULTURAL ATLAS INITIATIVE
EARLY AUSTRONESIAN HISTORICAL VOYAGING INMONSOON
ASIA: HERITAGE AND KNOWLEDGE FOR MUSEUM DISPLAYS
UTILIZING TEXTS, ARCHAEOLOGY, DIGITAL INTERACTIVE
COMPONENTS, AND GIS APPROACHES
1
DAVID BLUNDELLAND JEANETTE ZERNEKE
Abstract This paper covers work using historical geographic information
systems (GIS) by the Electronic Cultural Atlas Initiative (ECAI)
2
to trace
early navigation in Monsoon Asia. To open a scholarly Web-based platform
to a broader audience, the ECAI Austronesia Team is collaborating with
the Maritime Buddhism project conceived by Lewis Lancaster. The Maritime
Buddhism project is being developed to reach general audiences with a high level
of interactivity and 3D visualizations featuring historic timelines, ships, trade
routes and trade winds, travelling monks, life at ports, and stories. To allow the
information to be more accessible, mobile phone apps and multi-media museum
displays are being developed. Austronesian speaking peoples made navigation a
way of life across the Indian and Pacific oceans spanning thousands of years. The
goal of this integration of content and technology is to enable our understanding
of Monsoon Asia, its diffusion of culture, and oceanic navigation to become alive
and accessible.
Keywords: Maritime Buddhism, history, geographic information systems
(GIS), Monsoon Asia, Electronic Cultural Atlas Initiative (ECAI), Austronesia,
interactive museum displays, 3D, ALiVE – Applied Laboratory for Interactive
Visualization Embodiment
International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing 8 (2014) Supplement: 237–252
DOI: 10.3366/ijhac.2014.0110
© Edinburgh University Press
www.euppublishing.com/ijhac
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