WEBVTT 00:00:00.970 --> 00:00:05.290 Why do people deliberately destroy cultural heritage? 00:00:06.517 --> 00:00:07.852 By doing so, 00:00:07.852 --> 00:00:11.236 do they believe they're erasing our history? 00:00:11.471 --> 00:00:13.295 Our cultural memory? 00:00:14.690 --> 00:00:19.544 It's true that we are losing cultural heritage to erosion 00:00:19.544 --> 00:00:21.244 and natural disasters, 00:00:21.244 --> 00:00:24.178 but this is something that is simply difficult to avoid. 00:00:24.876 --> 00:00:27.350 I'm here to show you today 00:00:27.350 --> 00:00:29.219 how we can use pictures -- 00:00:29.219 --> 00:00:31.063 your pictures -- 00:00:31.063 --> 00:00:34.206 to reclaim the history that is being lost 00:00:34.206 --> 00:00:36.446 using innovative technology 00:00:36.446 --> 00:00:38.549 and the effort of volunteers. 00:00:40.282 --> 00:00:42.327 In the early 20th century, 00:00:42.327 --> 00:00:46.339 archaeologists discovered hundreds of statues and artifacts 00:00:46.339 --> 00:00:48.259 at the ancient city of Hatra, 00:00:48.259 --> 00:00:49.369 in northern Iraq. 00:00:50.164 --> 00:00:53.937 Statues like this one were found in fragments, 00:00:53.937 --> 00:00:57.042 some of them missing their heads or arms, 00:00:57.042 --> 00:00:59.579 yet the clothing that they are wearing, 00:00:59.579 --> 00:01:01.049 and their pose, 00:01:01.049 --> 00:01:03.332 can still tell us their story. 00:01:04.344 --> 00:01:05.513 For example, 00:01:05.513 --> 00:01:09.271 we believe that by wearing a knee-length tunic 00:01:09.271 --> 00:01:10.795 and open bare feet, 00:01:10.795 --> 00:01:13.376 this was representative of a priest. 00:01:14.062 --> 00:01:17.907 However, with a closer look at this particular piece, 00:01:17.907 --> 00:01:22.475 we can see that this tunic being worn was elaborately decorated, 00:01:22.475 --> 00:01:25.294 which has led many researchers to believe 00:01:25.294 --> 00:01:29.167 this was actually a statue of a king performing his religious functions. 00:01:31.377 --> 00:01:37.472 When the Mosul Cultural Museum opened in 1952 in northern Iraq, 00:01:37.472 --> 00:01:38.522 this statue, 00:01:38.522 --> 00:01:39.592 as well as others, 00:01:39.592 --> 00:01:42.756 were placed there to preserve them for future generations. 00:01:44.533 --> 00:01:48.464 Following the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, 00:01:48.464 --> 00:01:52.328 a few statues and artifacts were relocated to Baghdad, 00:01:52.328 --> 00:01:54.598 but this statue remained. 00:01:55.546 --> 00:01:57.972 Then in February of last year, 00:01:57.972 --> 00:01:59.394 a video was released, 00:01:59.394 --> 00:02:01.795 and it instantly went viral. 00:02:02.175 --> 00:02:04.470 Maybe some of you remember seeing it. 00:02:04.470 --> 00:02:05.800 Here's a short clip. 00:02:06.266 --> 00:02:10.512 (Video) (Music) 00:02:14.542 --> 00:02:15.543 (Statues falling) 00:02:26.046 --> 00:02:27.047 (Hammers pounding) 00:02:32.967 --> 00:02:33.967 (Music ends) 00:02:34.207 --> 00:02:36.599 Not a very pleasant sight, right? 00:02:37.779 --> 00:02:40.419 Did you notice anything familiar in the video? 00:02:41.811 --> 00:02:43.084 There it is. 00:02:43.337 --> 00:02:45.987 There is that very statue, 00:02:45.987 --> 00:02:47.746 as it was toppled over, 00:02:47.746 --> 00:02:49.266 breaking into pieces. 00:02:50.076 --> 00:02:52.961 When Matthew Vincent and I saw this video, 00:02:52.961 --> 00:02:54.229 we were shocked. 00:02:55.159 --> 00:02:58.611 Since we are archaeologists using innovative technology 00:02:58.611 --> 00:03:00.425 for digital preservation, 00:03:00.425 --> 00:03:01.984 an idea sprung to mind. 00:03:02.751 --> 00:03:07.439 Maybe we can crowdsource the images that were taken of these artifacts 00:03:07.439 --> 00:03:09.278 before they were destoryed 00:03:09.278 --> 00:03:11.221 to create digital reconstructions. 00:03:11.915 --> 00:03:13.039 If we can do that, 00:03:13.039 --> 00:03:15.303 maybe we can put them into a virtual museum 00:03:15.303 --> 00:03:16.537 to tell that story. 00:03:20.130 --> 00:03:23.658 And so two weeks after we saw this video, 00:03:23.658 --> 00:03:26.797 we started the project called Project Mosul. 00:03:28.428 --> 00:03:31.201 Remember the pictures of the statue I showed you before? 00:03:31.715 --> 00:03:36.060 This is actually the crowdsourced reconstruction of it 00:03:36.060 --> 00:03:37.665 before it was destroyed. 00:03:38.876 --> 00:03:41.023 Now, many of you may be wondering, 00:03:41.023 --> 00:03:42.761 how exactly does this work? 00:03:43.186 --> 00:03:46.465 Well, the key to this technology is called photogrammetry, 00:03:46.465 --> 00:03:48.921 and it was invented here, in Germany. 00:03:49.990 --> 00:03:53.420 It is the technology that allows us to use two-dimensional images 00:03:53.420 --> 00:03:56.393 taken of the same object from different angles 00:03:56.393 --> 00:03:57.788 to create a 3D model. 00:03:59.369 --> 00:04:02.900 I know you may be thinking this sounds like magic, 00:04:02.900 --> 00:04:03.902 but it's not. 00:04:03.902 --> 00:04:05.285 Let me show you how it works. 00:04:05.285 --> 00:04:08.056 Here are two crowdsourced images of the same statue. 00:04:09.028 --> 00:04:10.447 What the computer can do 00:04:10.447 --> 00:04:14.686 is it can detect similar features between the photographs -- 00:04:14.686 --> 00:04:16.719 similar features of the object. 00:04:17.669 --> 00:04:20.669 Then, by using multiple photos, 00:04:20.669 --> 00:04:21.692 in this case, 00:04:21.692 --> 00:04:24.397 it can begin to reconstruct the object in 3D. 00:04:25.021 --> 00:04:26.002 In this case, 00:04:26.002 --> 00:04:29.545 you have the position of the cameras when each image was taken 00:04:29.545 --> 00:04:30.723 shown in blue. 00:04:32.382 --> 00:04:34.749 Now, this is a partial reconstruction, 00:04:34.749 --> 00:04:35.820 I admit, 00:04:35.820 --> 00:04:37.412 but why would I say partial? 00:04:37.717 --> 00:04:42.396 Well, simply because the statue was positioned against a wall. 00:04:42.971 --> 00:04:45.574 We don't have photographs taken of it from the back. 00:04:46.439 --> 00:04:51.415 If I wanted to complete a full digital reconstruction of this statue, 00:04:51.415 --> 00:04:53.148 I would need a proper camera, 00:04:53.148 --> 00:04:54.149 tripods, 00:04:54.149 --> 00:04:55.152 proper lighting, 00:04:55.152 --> 00:04:57.642 but we simply can't do that with crowdsourced images. 00:04:58.353 --> 00:04:59.423 Think about it; 00:04:59.423 --> 00:05:00.436 how many of you, 00:05:00.436 --> 00:05:01.680 when you visit a museum, 00:05:01.680 --> 00:05:03.945 take photographs of all parts of the statue, 00:05:03.945 --> 00:05:05.410 even the back side of it? 00:05:06.506 --> 00:05:10.127 Well, maybe if some of you find Michelangelo's David interesting, 00:05:10.127 --> 00:05:11.232 I guess -- 00:05:11.232 --> 00:05:12.226 (Laughter) 00:05:13.268 --> 00:05:14.781 But the thing is, 00:05:14.781 --> 00:05:18.071 if we can find more images of this object, 00:05:18.071 --> 00:05:19.695 we can improve the 3D model. 00:05:21.233 --> 00:05:23.431 When we started the project, 00:05:23.431 --> 00:05:25.604 we started it with the Mosul Museum in mind. 00:05:25.604 --> 00:05:27.271 We figured we may get a few images, 00:05:27.271 --> 00:05:28.565 some people interested, 00:05:28.565 --> 00:05:31.068 make one or two virtual reconstructions, 00:05:31.068 --> 00:05:35.827 but we had no idea that we had sparked something that would grow so quickly. 00:05:36.376 --> 00:05:37.953 Before we knew it, 00:05:37.953 --> 00:05:40.008 we realized it was obvious: 00:05:40.008 --> 00:05:44.659 we could apply this same idea to lost heritage anywhere, 00:05:44.659 --> 00:05:48.995 and so we decided to change the name of the project to Rekrei. 00:05:50.107 --> 00:05:52.651 Then in the summer of last year, 00:05:52.651 --> 00:05:55.691 The Economist magazine's media lab reached out to us. 00:05:56.773 --> 00:05:57.971 They asked us, 00:05:57.971 --> 00:06:00.762 "Hey, would you like us to build a virtual museum 00:06:00.762 --> 00:06:02.651 to put the reconstructions back inside 00:06:02.651 --> 00:06:03.931 to tell the story?" 00:06:04.298 --> 00:06:06.092 Can you imagine us saying "no?" 00:06:06.092 --> 00:06:07.417 Of course not. 00:06:07.417 --> 00:06:08.533 We said, "yes." 00:06:08.533 --> 00:06:09.713 We were so excited. 00:06:09.713 --> 00:06:12.893 This was exactly the initial dream of that project. 00:06:13.762 --> 00:06:14.973 And so now, 00:06:14.973 --> 00:06:18.611 any of you can experience "RecoVR Mosul" on your phone, 00:06:18.611 --> 00:06:19.928 using Google Cardboard, 00:06:19.928 --> 00:06:20.933 or a tablet, 00:06:20.933 --> 00:06:22.575 or even Youtube 360. 00:06:23.144 --> 00:06:26.334 Here is a screenshot from the virtual museum. 00:06:26.624 --> 00:06:28.411 And there it is ... 00:06:28.411 --> 00:06:30.933 the partial reconstruction of the statue, 00:06:30.933 --> 00:06:34.030 as well as the Lion of Mosul, 00:06:34.030 --> 00:06:36.702 the first reconstruction completed by our project. 00:06:37.639 --> 00:06:42.453 Although the video doesn't explicitly show the Lion of Mosul being destroyed, 00:06:42.453 --> 00:06:46.610 we have many other examples of large artifacts being destroyed 00:06:46.610 --> 00:06:49.751 that were simply too large to have been stolen. 00:06:50.272 --> 00:06:51.659 For example, 00:06:51.659 --> 00:06:54.445 the Gate of Nimrud in northern Iraq. 00:06:54.757 --> 00:06:57.640 This is a digital reconstruction from before, 00:06:57.640 --> 00:07:01.005 and this is actually during the destruction. 00:07:01.506 --> 00:07:03.770 Or the Lion of Lion of al-Lāt, 00:07:03.770 --> 00:07:05.270 in Palmyra, Syria: 00:07:05.270 --> 00:07:07.001 before ... 00:07:07.001 --> 00:07:08.271 and after. 00:07:09.646 --> 00:07:12.940 Although virtual reconstructions are primarily the main focus 00:07:12.940 --> 00:07:14.033 of our project, 00:07:14.033 --> 00:07:16.634 some people have been asking the question: 00:07:16.634 --> 00:07:20.030 can we print them in 3D? 00:07:20.655 --> 00:07:24.936 We believe 3-D printing doesn't offer a straightforward solution 00:07:24.936 --> 00:07:26.126 to lost heritage. 00:07:26.438 --> 00:07:28.411 Once an object is destoyed, 00:07:28.411 --> 00:07:29.407 it's gone. 00:07:30.152 --> 00:07:35.029 But 3-D printing does offer an addition to tell that story. 00:07:35.874 --> 00:07:37.013 For example, 00:07:37.013 --> 00:07:38.891 I can show you here ... 00:07:41.760 --> 00:07:44.698 there is the statue from Hetra, 00:07:44.698 --> 00:07:46.542 and the Lion of Mosul. 00:07:46.542 --> 00:07:47.535 (Applause) 00:07:53.996 --> 00:07:55.144 Thank you. 00:07:55.144 --> 00:07:56.672 Now, if you look closely, 00:07:56.672 --> 00:08:01.203 you'll notice that there are some parts that have been printed in color, 00:08:01.203 --> 00:08:03.786 and some parts that are in white or gray. 00:08:04.815 --> 00:08:08.617 This part was added simply to hold the statues up. 00:08:08.934 --> 00:08:11.385 This works the same way if you visit a museum, 00:08:11.385 --> 00:08:13.690 and a statue is found in fragments; 00:08:13.690 --> 00:08:15.886 it's put together for the people to see it. 00:08:16.071 --> 00:08:17.527 This makes sense, right? 00:08:18.621 --> 00:08:20.398 However, we're much more interested 00:08:20.398 --> 00:08:23.793 in what virtual reality has to offer for lost heritage. 00:08:24.520 --> 00:08:27.045 Here is an example of one of the tower tombs 00:08:27.045 --> 00:08:28.864 that was destroyed in Palmyra. 00:08:28.944 --> 00:08:30.922 Using Sketchfab's online viewer, 00:08:30.922 --> 00:08:36.601 we can show that we have reconstructed three parts of the exterior of the tomb, 00:08:36.601 --> 00:08:38.530 but we also have photos of the inside, 00:08:38.530 --> 00:08:41.223 so we're beginning to create a reconstruction of the wall 00:08:41.223 --> 00:08:42.335 and the ceiling. 00:08:42.881 --> 00:08:45.812 Archaeologists worked there for many, many years, 00:08:45.812 --> 00:08:50.549 so we also have architectural drawing plans of this lost heritage. 00:08:52.439 --> 00:08:58.845 Unfortunately, we are not only losing cultural heritage to areas of conflict 00:08:58.845 --> 00:08:59.853 and at war, 00:08:59.853 --> 00:09:02.152 we're also losing it to natural disasters. 00:09:02.978 --> 00:09:07.004 This is a 3-D model of Durbar Square in Kathmandu 00:09:07.004 --> 00:09:10.528 before the earthquake that occurred last April ... 00:09:10.528 --> 00:09:11.778 and this is after. 00:09:13.116 --> 00:09:14.460 You may be thinking, 00:09:14.460 --> 00:09:18.113 you didn't create these 3-D models with only tourist photographs, 00:09:18.113 --> 00:09:19.393 and that's true, 00:09:19.393 --> 00:09:20.893 but what this represents 00:09:20.893 --> 00:09:24.663 is the ability for large, public organizations and private industry 00:09:24.663 --> 00:09:27.073 to come together for initiatives like ours. 00:09:29.776 --> 00:09:32.971 And so one of the major challenges of our project really, 00:09:32.971 --> 00:09:36.420 is to find photographs that were taken before something happens, 00:09:36.420 --> 00:09:37.420 right? 00:09:37.720 --> 00:09:40.749 Well, the Internet is basically a database 00:09:40.749 --> 00:09:43.048 with millions of images, 00:09:43.048 --> 00:09:44.046 right? 00:09:44.046 --> 00:09:45.054 Exactly. 00:09:45.389 --> 00:09:48.602 So we have begun to develop a tool 00:09:48.602 --> 00:09:52.732 that allows us to extract images from websites like Flickr 00:09:52.732 --> 00:09:54.205 based on their geotags 00:09:54.205 --> 00:09:55.788 to complete reconstructions. 00:09:56.496 --> 00:10:00.972 Because we're not only losing cultural heritage to natural disasters 00:10:00.972 --> 00:10:03.411 and in war, 00:10:03.411 --> 00:10:06.380 but we're also losing it to something else. 00:10:07.998 --> 00:10:09.051 Any idea, 00:10:09.051 --> 00:10:10.869 just looking at these two pictures? 00:10:11.749 --> 00:10:14.413 Maybe it's a little difficult to remember, 00:10:14.413 --> 00:10:16.857 but only a few weeks ago, 00:10:16.857 --> 00:10:21.467 this was the example of human destruction by human stupidity. 00:10:22.049 --> 00:10:23.351 Because a man -- 00:10:23.351 --> 00:10:27.040 a tourist in Lisbon wanted to climb onto this statue, 00:10:27.040 --> 00:10:29.653 and take a selfie with it, 00:10:29.653 --> 00:10:31.185 and pulled it down with him. 00:10:31.696 --> 00:10:33.709 So we're already finding photographs 00:10:33.709 --> 00:10:35.863 to complete a digital reconstruction of this. 00:10:37.074 --> 00:10:38.384 We need to remember 00:10:38.384 --> 00:10:42.931 that the destruction of cultural heritage isn't a recent phenomenon. 00:10:43.764 --> 00:10:45.290 In the 16th century, 00:10:45.290 --> 00:10:51.703 European priests and explorers burned thousands of Maya books in the Americas, 00:10:51.703 --> 00:10:54.216 of which we only have a handful left. 00:10:55.655 --> 00:10:57.299 Fast-forward to 2001, 00:10:57.299 --> 00:11:00.606 when the Taliban blew up the Bamiyan Buddhas in Afghanistan. 00:11:01.854 --> 00:11:03.613 You see, 00:11:03.613 --> 00:11:07.680 cultural heritage is about our shared global history. 00:11:08.920 --> 00:11:12.685 It helps us connect with our ancestors and their stories, 00:11:12.685 --> 00:11:16.980 but we're losing pieces of it every day to natural disasters 00:11:16.980 --> 00:11:19.266 and in areas of conflict. 00:11:20.296 --> 00:11:25.842 Of course the loss of human life is the most heartbreaking loss, 00:11:25.842 --> 00:11:31.702 but cultural heritage offers us a way to preserve the memory of the people 00:11:31.702 --> 00:11:33.212 for future generations. 00:11:34.429 --> 00:11:38.385 We need your help to reclaim the history that is being lost. 00:11:39.485 --> 00:11:40.722 Will you join us? 00:11:41.499 --> 00:11:42.501 (Applause)