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How your pictures can help reclaim lost history

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    Why do people deliberately
    destroy cultural heritage?
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    By doing so,
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    do they believe they're
    erasing our history?
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    Our cultural memory?
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    It's true that we are losing
    cultural heritage to erosion
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    and natural disasters,
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    but this is something
    that is simply difficult to avoid.
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    I'm here to show you today
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    how we can use pictures --
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    your pictures --
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    to reclaim the history that is being lost
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    using innovative technology
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    and the effort of volunteers.
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    In the early 20th century,
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    archaeologists discovered
    hundreds of statues and artifacts
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    at the ancient city of Hatra,
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    in northern Iraq.
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    Statues like this one
    were found in fragments,
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    some of them missing their heads or arms,
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    yet the clothing that they are wearing,
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    and their pose,
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    can still tell us their story.
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    For example,
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    we believe that by wearing
    a knee-length tunic
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    and open bare feet,
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    this was representative of a priest.
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    However, with a closer look
    at this particular piece,
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    we can see that this tunic being worn
    was elaborately decorated,
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    which has led many researchers to believe
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    this was actually a statue of a king
    performing his religious functions.
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    When the Mosul Cultural Museum
    opened in 1952 in northern Iraq,
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    this statue,
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    as well as others,
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    were placed there to preserve them
    for future generations.
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    Following the US-led invasion
    of Iraq in 2003,
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    a few statues and artifacts
    were relocated to Baghdad,
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    but this statue remained.
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    Then in February of last year,
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    a video was released,
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    and it instantly went viral.
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    Maybe some of you remember seeing it.
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    Here's a short clip.
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    (Video) (Music)
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    (Statues falling)
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    (Hammers pounding)
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    (Music ends)
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    Not a very pleasant sight, right?
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    Did you notice anything
    familiar in the video?
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    There it is.
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    There is that very statue,
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    as it was toppled over,
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    breaking into pieces.
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    When Matthew Vincent and I saw this video,
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    we were shocked.
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    Since we are archaeologists
    using innovative technology
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    for digital preservation,
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    an idea sprung to mind.
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    Maybe we can crowdsource the images
    that were taken of these artifacts
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    before they were destoryed
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    to create digital reconstructions.
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    If we can do that,
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    maybe we can put them
    into a virtual museum
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    to tell that story.
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    And so two weeks after we saw this video,
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    we started the project
    called Project Mosul.
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    Remember the pictures of the statue
    I showed you before?
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    This is actually the crowdsourced
    reconstruction of it
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    before it was destroyed.
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    Now, many of you may be wondering,
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    how exactly does this work?
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    Well, the key to this technology
    is called photogrammetry,
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    and it was invented here, in Germany.
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    It is the technology that allows us
    to use two-dimensional images
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    taken of the same object
    from different angles
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    to create a 3D model.
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    I know you may be thinking
    this sounds like magic,
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    but it's not.
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    Let me show you how it works.
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    Here are two crowdsourced images
    of the same statue.
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    What the computer can do
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    is it can detect similar features
    between the photographs --
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    similar features of the object.
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    Then, by using multiple photos,
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    in this case,
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    it can begin to reconstruct
    the object in 3D.
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    In this case,
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    you have the position of the cameras
    when each image was taken
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    shown in blue.
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    Now, this is a partial reconstruction,
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    I admit,
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    but why would I say partial?
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    Well, simply because the statue
    was positioned against a wall.
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    We don't have photographs
    taken of it from the back.
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    If I wanted to complete a full
    digital reconstruction of this statue,
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    I would need a proper camera,
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    tripods,
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    proper lighting,
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    but we simply can't do that
    with crowdsourced images.
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    Think about it;
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    how many of you,
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    when you visit a museum,
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    take photographs of all
    parts of the statue,
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    even the back side of it?
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    Well, maybe if some of you find
    Michelangelo's David interesting,
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    I guess --
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    (Laughter)
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    But the thing is,
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    if we can find more images of this object,
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    we can improve the 3D model.
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    When we started the project,
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    we started it with
    the Mosul Museum in mind.
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    We figured we may get a few images,
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    some people interested,
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    make one or two virtual reconstructions,
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    but we had no idea that we had sparked
    something that would grow so quickly.
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    Before we knew it,
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    we realized it was obvious:
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    we could apply this same idea
    to lost heritage anywhere,
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    and so we decided to change
    the name of the project to Rekrei.
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    Then in the summer of last year,
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    The Economist magazine's media lab
    reached out to us.
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    They asked us,
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    "Hey, would you like us
    to build a virtual museum
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    to put the reconstructions back inside
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    to tell the story?"
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    Can you imagine us saying "no?"
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    Of course not.
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    We said, "yes."
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    We were so excited.
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    This was exactly the initial
    dream of that project.
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    And so now,
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    any of you can experience
    "RecoVR Mosul" on your phone,
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    using Google Cardboard,
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    or a tablet,
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    or even Youtube 360.
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    Here is a screenshot
    from the virtual museum.
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    And there it is ...
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    the partial reconstruction of the statue,
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    as well as the Lion of Mosul,
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    the first reconstruction
    completed by our project.
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    Although the video doesn't explicitly show
    the Lion of Mosul being destroyed,
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    we have many other examples
    of large artifacts being destroyed
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    that were simply too large
    to have been stolen.
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    For example,
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    the Gate of Nimrud in northern Iraq.
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    This is a digital
    reconstruction from before,
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    and this is actually
    during the destruction.
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    Or the Lion of Lion of al-Lāt,
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    in Palmyra, Syria:
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    before ...
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    and after.
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    Although virtual reconstructions
    are primarily the main focus
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    of our project,
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    some people have been asking the question:
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    can we print them in 3D?
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    We believe 3-D printing
    doesn't offer a straightforward solution
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    to lost heritage.
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    Once an object is destoyed,
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    it's gone.
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    But 3-D printing does offer
    an addition to tell that story.
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    For example,
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    I can show you here ...
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    there is the statue from Hetra,
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    and the Lion of Mosul.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    Now, if you look closely,
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    you'll notice that there are some parts
    that have been printed in color,
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    and some parts that are in white or gray.
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    This part was added simply
    to hold the statues up.
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    This works the same way
    if you visit a museum,
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    and a statue is found in fragments;
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    it's put together
    for the people to see it.
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    This makes sense, right?
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    However, we're much more interested
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    in what virtual reality
    has to offer for lost heritage.
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    Here is an example
    of one of the tower tombs
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    that was destroyed in Palmyra.
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    Using Sketchfab's online viewer,
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    we can show that we have reconstructed
    three parts of the exterior of the tomb,
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    but we also have photos of the inside,
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    so we're beginning to create
    a reconstruction of the wall
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    and the ceiling.
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    Archaeologists worked there
    for many, many years,
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    so we also have architectural
    drawing plans of this lost heritage.
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    Unfortunately, we are not only losing
    cultural heritage to areas of conflict
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    and at war,
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    we're also losing it to natural disasters.
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    This is a 3-D model
    of Durbar Square in Kathmandu
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    before the earthquake
    that occurred last April ...
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    and this is after.
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    You may be thinking,
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    you didn't create these 3-D models
    with only tourist photographs,
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    and that's true,
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    but what this represents
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    is the ability for large, public
    organizations and private industry
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    to come together
    for initiatives like ours.
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    And so one of the major challenges
    of our project really,
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    is to find photographs that were taken
    before something happens,
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    right?
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    Well, the Internet is basically a database
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    with millions of images,
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    right?
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    Exactly.
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    So we have begun to develop a tool
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    that allows us to extract images
    from websites like Flickr
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    based on their geotags
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    to complete reconstructions.
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    Because we're not only losing
    cultural heritage to natural disasters
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    and in war,
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    but we're also losing it
    to something else.
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    Any idea,
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    just looking at these two pictures?
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    Maybe it's a little difficult to remember,
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    but only a few weeks ago,
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    this was the example of human
    destruction by human stupidity.
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    Because a man --
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    a tourist in Lisbon wanted
    to climb onto this statue,
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    and take a selfie with it,
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    and pulled it down with him.
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    So we're already finding photographs
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    to complete a digital
    reconstruction of this.
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    We need to remember
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    that the destruction of cultural heritage
    isn't a recent phenomenon.
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    In the 16th century,
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    European priests and explorers burned
    thousands of Maya books in the Americas,
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    of which we only have a handful left.
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    Fast-forward to 2001,
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    when the Taliban blew up
    the Bamiyan Buddhas in Afghanistan.
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    You see,
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    cultural heritage is about
    our shared global history.
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    It helps us connect with our
    ancestors and their stories,
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    but we're losing pieces of it
    every day to natural disasters
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    and in areas of conflict.
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    Of course the loss of human life
    is the most heartbreaking loss,
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    but cultural heritage offers us a way
    to preserve the memory of the people
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    for future generations.
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    We need your help to reclaim
    the history that is being lost.
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    Will you join us?
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    (Applause)
Title:
How your pictures can help reclaim lost history
Speaker:
Chance Coughenour
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
11:57

English subtitles

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