Zamani Project Field Diary of Musawwarat es-Sufra, Sudan
Friday 6th February – Cape Town, South Africa to Dubai, UAE
Today marks our departure for our trip to the Sudan to digitally preserve in 3D the Meroic temple of Musawwarat es-Sufra, situated north of Khartoum on the 6th cataract. The objectives of this mission were for preservation of the structure in digital form for future generations as well as for site management and archeological interpretation.
10:00 We are still hurriedly packing up our gear. We are also under some time pressure as our passports have not yet arrived yet from the Sudanese Embassy in Pretoria, and we are meant to be leaving today. Also we still need to go to the bank to exchange money for the trip.
16:30 With some more minor problems sorted out, such as South African banks having sanctions against Sudan, we are finally on board and the 5 of us are eager to be on a new expedition to experience another marvel in the midst of Africa.
Saturday 7th February – Dubai Airport, UAE to Khartoum, Sudan
5:30 We arrive in Dubai Airport for a 10 hour time kill stint before leaving for the Sudan.
17:30 We arrive in Khartoum, Sudan, collect our luggage and head for the dreaded Customs Offices. We always have problems getting our 3D laser scanners, which are rather expensive, through customs officials who don’t understand what the instruments are used for. We find ourselves in a room in the Khartoum airport full of packages piled up to the ceiling and go about trying to find someone dressed in a uniform to sign our Equipment Import letters. We get passed from one official to another and are finally told to bring our logistics champion, Tim Karberg, to vouch for us. Tim is working with the German archeologists who have a camp at Musawwarat where we will be staying to conduct the fieldwork. The negotiations are started and end two hours later. Conclusion: leave all the stuff behind and come back tomorrow.
Sunday 8th February – Khartoum to Musawwarat es-Sufra, Sudan
07:00 We are up early for breakfast after an exhausting sleep from over 36 hours without. We
are in Khartoum, a historically important city at the convergence of the White and Blue Nile. We head to the Interior Affairs department to register our passports and get some documents to get our equipment out of customs and then we’re off to the airport to get the gear.
No luck. We’re dropped off at the hotel and Heinz and Tim go off to pick up someone to take to the airport to sort out the tangle. 6 hours later they return with still no luck. This after filling in dozens of forms, being shuffled around, told contradictory information, and finally being shut out of the customs offices. They managed to sneak back in through a back door to find all the equipment lying all over the place, some on top of those piles of boxes up to the ceiling. Eventually they manage to get all our equipment out. The rest of us relax at the hotel, sleep on the couches and smell the paint dry. But the equipment is free!
17:00 We pack up the truck and head out for Musawwarat es-Sufra. Finally we are able to get out of Khartoum and get to the site! Chris, Roshan and I cram in the back, in the cold, in the dark, and 4 hours later we arrive dusty and weary at the German archeological camp at Musawwarat. We settle down to some spaghetti and sauce. German conversation fills the air as we settle into our new home for the next 2 weeks.
The Camp is sponsored by the Humbolt University of Berlin, is run by Thomas and has been operational for over 15 years. It is fully self-sufficient with solar power, kitchen, toilets, showers, and eating areas. Food and supplies are collected from the nearby town of Shendi, while water is fetched from a nearby well. Thomas comes here for a couple months every year to work on excavating and reconstructing the Musawwarat temple and is in the process of erecting the outer wall around the temple. Conny has also been
here on and off for a few years and is busy doing research work on the graffiti on the temple. Also at the camp is Tim, the logistics person, Yenz who is Conny’s student and Rebecca who is also doing research on the site.
Monday 9th February – Musawwarat es-Sufra, Sudan
6:30 We awake by the sun at dawn and eat a breakfast of pita bread with sheep cheese, strawberry jam, yoghurt, bananas, and tea. We feast well for we know a long hard day waits.
We have come a long way to be here. Over 4 years of planning, organizing and negotiation and now the scanning will begin. The temple is a collection of ruined walls and passages. Pillars stand at irregular heights and carvings mark the walls. Courtyards open onto terraced balconies and ramps lead up to rooms. Some think this temple could have been for elephant training, others think it was a school for architects, its true function is not precisely known. Now it lies abandoned, loose rocks spilling from holes in the walls. Much of it lies under sand, which protects it. The exposed regions lie unguarded against the wind and the sand and wind erosion is evident on many columns and walls. This is why it is essential that scanning projects like ours act quickly to digitally preserve these sites before they are gone forever.
A light breeze blows the harshness of the desert sun away as the first scan position is chosen atop a wall in the ‘great enclosure’ of Musawwarat Temple. From this viewpoint the entire temple compound can be seen, and
scanned with the Leica HDS 3000, which has a range of 130m and is perfect as the size of the site is roughly 250m x 200m. The generator is fired up but unfortunately it splutters to a halt and endless configurations of batteries and UPS’s are tried until eventually the generator makes a remarkable recovery and maintains a somewhat steady power output. The scanning has begun! It will take a good couple hours to do a full 360 degree horizontal, -45 to 0 degree vertical scan at 5 x 3 cm resolution over 100m. The Leica HDS 6000 which runs of battery is much faster with only 3 and a half minutes per scan, although on a much shorter range, the resolution is chosen at 2cm over 25m at 360 degrees full dome. They quickly move around the pillars and walls capturing more detailed information.
Our procedure of scanning is not to use targets as is the conventional approach. We find that the setting up of targets uses considerable time, especially since we will eventually will have around 360 scans for this trip. We use geometric surface features for
registration of the scans after we have created meshes out of the scans. We are also trying out a new approach to registration which involves capturing the scan positions by RTK GPS.
The evening is spent trying to send emails, having a braai, and taking a shower which is warm from the days heat. Our bedroom is under
the lucid night stars with an incredibly bright full moon,
sleeping on camp stretchers out in the open desert. A dogs howling would have topped off the wilderness atmosphere, but Roshan’s snoring is sufficient, especially for Ralph who decides to move his bed far away to get some quieter rest.
Tuesday 10th February – Musawwarat es-Sufra
Today we start early to catch the morning cool, and we are much better organized with batteries and generators running smoothly. Conditions are excellent and today promises to be constructive. The 3000 is set up for a 3 hour 360 degree scan, while the 6000 is started off down a passageway near the central part of the temple, with attention given to capture the tops of walls. These walls are crumbling apart and sometimes 2 or 3 meters high and its quite tricky setting up the scanner in certain sections while being careful not to damage anything. Chris’s rock climbing skills come in indispensable as he chooses what some would call risky setups, which are no doubt perfectly stable in his mind. Roshan is meanwhile having a mini nervous breakdown and Heinz threatens to hurl him off Blaukrans bridge when we get home to cure his fear of heights, bungee-rope attached of course…
Once the 3000 is started there is nothing for us to do, besides trying to find a shady spot to hide from the sun. So Roshan and I start the Panoramas. Heinz also starts his photogrammetry in the morning light. Careful not to capture the scanner in the background, 10 or so spherical dome panoramas are taken in HDR. I set about teaching Roshan how to take HDR panoramas and carefully show him how to determine the correct aperture and exposure settings. HDR involves taking at least 3 images, or frames, at one spot. One photo is taken at normal exposure, and the other two are over and under exposed. Once the 3 or more images are blended together the dark areas can be brightened and bright areas darkened quite easily since the 3 images ensure a high range of exposures are captured.
Lunch time is as soon as the 3000 has finished. 12 o’clock it is done and we pack up, leave some equipment on site and head back to camp. However, a storm arrives soon after we leave. In Cape Town a storm means lots of rain. In the Sudan it means lots of dust. The dust storm threatens our work schedule for the afternoon and also our equipment which was left on site; the 2 scanners, generators, tripods and batteries. We rush back to fetch the equipment, shielding our eyes from the painful dust. Back at camp we eat lunch and grumble. The afternoon seems to have been ruined after an optimistic start to the day.
The sand storm has ended scanning for the day. It’s too risky to expose the scanners to the dusty wind that could get inside the instruments and play havoc. We watch the sun through the dust clouds, it looks like the moon.
We look at some maps of Musawwarat on the GIS and realize the digital map made by Dieter, an architect, has been distorted. The map is a scanned version of a hardcopy map and has gridlines every 50m. We create the grid in ArcGIS and reference the map to it. It does not fit. Choosing 2 points on opposite corners to geo-reference the map to and then comparing a third corner reveals an error of 1.3m. Measuring the distances between grid intersections on the map reveals that the grid is not constant with errors of 30 cm common in varying directions. The Dieter map has remarkable detail, although being an architect he has drawn everything as straight lines which is not what is there in reality. Our final 3D model will improve this.
We prepare some food, make some salad and then eat. The dust storm still rages so we move our beds under cover of the porch and sleep.
Wednesday 11th February – Musawwarat es-Sufra
6:00 It is cold this morning out in the desert. A hasty meal of bread, jam and cheese is eaten before we pack and leave for the site. It looks like the wind is not too strong today.
We then decide that the wind is in fact too strong so we huddle in a temple room and listen to Tims story of Kushite history. Then we decide to start scanning. The 6000 with Chris and Ralph goes around the main enclosure and the 3000 is set up on top another central wall and run off the generator. This will be another 360 degree 4 hour scan. In the meantime we get out the RTK GPS and set up the base station in the ‘great enclosure’ and start taking some points around the edge of the temple compound to register our maps to. Our RTK GPS is accurate to up to 3cm so we will also take some points of wall corners to reference our 3D model to. This is to orient and level the model, and check for possible scan registration errors. We pick up around 30 points of wall corners and then move to another small enclosure outside the temple compound. We draw a sketch of this enclosure and pick up around 80 points of wall corners before the base battery dies and we return.
Chris takes some polynormal texture mapping pictures using the flash at multiple positions to capture different light sources. We have no power here now so I need to stop writing.
Thursday 12th February – Musawwarat es-Sufra
A magnificent day. Blue skies, light wind. No generator problems. The 3000 scanner is set up on a wall on the northern temple, a very shaky unstable wall, and is set for another 4 hour mission by Ralph and myself. The 6000 scanner with Roshan and Chris start at the “wedding rooms”. The light conditions are good and so Ralph and I leave the scanner to take panoramas in the early morning light.
We take a few at the “great enclosure” and then move to the small temple. In the meantime however, all is not well with the 3000 scanner. The external laptop battery has decided to end its career out in the sand and dust, but luckily the internal battery is still hanging in there. I arrive just in time to plug it onto the generator. The scan finally ends and we go back to camp to eat and recharge. There is talk of finishing this scanning of Musawwarat in three days and then heading on to Meroe to scan some of the pyramids there for another three days, with a stop at Naga to see some other Kushite temples which are apparently in excellent condition and quite amazing structures. We also want to scan the Hafir behind the camp which is a big ancient water reservoir. It has recently been dug out again with the view of converting this entire valley back into its original state, creating a haven for tourists and creating a theme park out of the Musawwarat temple. This is a terrible scheme by some unscrupulous businessmen but fortunately it seems they have run out of money. However, they have fenced off large areas of land, blocking out the nomads in the area and preventing them from reaching a valuable water source.
During lunch I create the GIS with the GPS points and georeference the map of the temple so that Heinz can plot his photogrammetric picture positions. Afterwards we pack the gear and head out to the site for a late afternoon session. The 3000 is set up outside the temple walls to capture the outside of the outer wall and the generator almost gives up due to the strain of running the scanner, laptop and recharging a 6000 battery. The battery is unplugged and the little generator recovers. The 6000 meanwhile scans the connecting passage between the great enclosure and the northern temple. A cool breeze blows as the sun goes down over Musawwart in these agreeable scanning conditions.
The evening is spent cutting up meat that looks like it’s been hung outside one of those butcheries you see in African towns. Actually that’s exactly where it comes from. A leg of lamb, or possibly goat. We carve it up and Chris and I light a fire with local charcoal and cardboard. We braai the meat and a couple tinfoiled bringels on the fire and at around 10 o’clock we eat a great feast of salads, potato chips, lamb, sources etc. Someone gets out a laptop and we set up the desert cinema. We watch Tomb Raider. It was kind of ironic however to sit with these passionate German archeologists and watch a sensational movie like that but it was fun.
Friday 13th February – Musawwarat es-Sufra
We head out to site, with a glorious sunrise framing the background. Ralph will one day publish a book called Africa’s best sunsets and sunrises and we wonder if he has a sunset function on his camera. The 6000 starts with the small east temple and the 3000 with the outer wall. The first scan finishes fine and then on the second scan the little generator dies out once again and cannot be resuscitated. In the meantime I continue with the RTK GPS of the small enclosure outside the temple compound. The other bigger generator is fetched from the camp and starts fine after its extensive repair last night. The
second scan finally starts and we go rest under the shade of a thorny tree as a group of camels and donkeys walk by in a cloud of dust carrying water containers to fetch water from the nearby well. After lunch we start scanning the hafir, then go back to the site quite late to scan the Northern temple with the 6000, using the GPS RTK to capture the scan positions which will make registration easier. We also capture some reference points at the site that have absolute WGS84 Co-ordinates so that we can reference our system to theirs. Another polynormal texture mapping picture is tried but the camera unfortunately moves and we go home, after a long 12 hour day.
Some problems occur with the external hard drives as one power supply dies and leaks some nasty liquid into the plug-boards, short circuiting one of them. One external hard-drive is fixed so now we just have the one backup. This trip is full of challenges and we must really persevere if we want to finish.
We watch a David Bowie concert outside in the desert cinema, take some photos of the moon and do some long exposures with a torch painting pictures against the clear night sky.
Saturday 14th February – Musawwarat es-Sufra
Everyone is tired today, you can see the body language and Chris and Heinz are not well. But alas the scanning must go on and so we head out to the site once again and continue where we left off yesterday. However, the big generator packs up again and so the 3000 is rendered useless.
MAJOR PROBLEM
Both generators are kaput. So now we solely rely on solar power, however this is needed to run the camp fridge and lights. So we put just one 6000 battery on charge for an afternoon session. A third generator that is dead now for 2 years is brought out and worked on but to no avail, the little generator gives out too small power and the other one does not start, with sparks flying out the bottom. Things are at their worst and nobody knows what to do. Sending the generators to be fixed in Shendi is talked of. Our last option is to try using an inverter on the car battery while the car is running. This amazingly works and we scan the rest of the hafir this way -scanning from the car as it idles. We should finish tomorrow hopefully if we can somehow recharge the 6000 battery and the RTK GPS, Inshallah.
Sunday 15th February – Musawwarat es-Sufra
Today we plan to finish the work. The 3000 reached its final frontier. We were running it from the car battery while the car was idling, but the car couldn’t keep up the charge and we were forced to give it up. Yesterday we were lucky enough to run it and do the last scan of the hafir.
Today I scanned with Ralph with the 6000 the southern temple. In the afternoon after the 6000 battery was recharged on the solar-power I did RTK GPS on Musawwarat Temple of the graffiti on the walls that Conny is studying. This is to create a plan of where the different types of graffiti are situated. It was very interesting as we got about 110 points of different types of graffiti, from animals to Apedomak the lion god, as well as some Christian symbols, and people drinking from a beer pot. There were also monkeys, and a crocodile eating a buffalo. This could have been a zoo perhaps? The 6000 carried on doing what the 3000 missed, the outside walls of the temple, and there was a final countdown as the last scan finished of Musawwarat, exhausted, in the dark after another 12 hour day in the sun. Relief!
Monday 16th February – Naga
Today we go to Naga, an ancient Meroetic site with village, temple, kiosk, alters, tombs and an avenue of rams.
We drive through arid desert, completely flat with desert shrubs and trees dotting the orangey-red landscape. This takes around an hour and we pass by some nomads, and some camels and goats just left to wonder around.
We arrive at the Naga archeological camp and enter their ‘fortress’, a square structure with an open area in the middle. Statues are placed around the camp so it feels like you’re in a museum and we drink Pepsis kept cool in an old clay water pot. A team of white light, close range scanners are here scanning small objects like little clay jars and also some of the frescoes on the Amon temple walls with 60 micron accuracy. They scan 1m by 1m areas at a time and it is expensive work but the results are amazing.
We walk around the Amon temple, which is small but spectacular. An avenue of rams faces towards the temple where Apedemak and snakes are depicted. I take some panoramas and we walk down to the local drinking hole – the well, passing some more temple ruins. The well is fascinating on its own and you could spend hours there watching the events. It is 60m deep and to get the water out a pulley is set up on a wooden frame above it and two donkeys are attached to a rope that is passed over the pulley and attached at the other end to a leather bucket. The donkeys are encouraged, with a stick, to walk away from the well pulling up the leather bucket. The water is then poured down an opening which runs into a series of basins were people take it from. Nomads come from all around the desert with their donkeys and
camels carrying water containers. Also they bring their flocks of dirty long tailed sheep and fluffy goats to drink from the animal water basin. Donkeys rest against each other and people talk excitedly amongst themselves at this focal point of nomad civilization.
The lion temple itself is spectacular with the two entrance pylons having interesting depictions. This was the height of the Nubian rule and so the depictions of battle adorn the walls 5m high as well also a depiction of a fat Kush queen with long fingernails, quite contrary to the Egypt queens.
The story in brief popular form:
Egypt civilization became powerful and decided to expand and take over other lands. Below them to the south was the wretched Kush. Egypt plundered their lands, stole their gold and took people as slaves. Popular depictions were of Egyptians beheading Kushites and crushing them. Egypt reached a decline in around 1000bc and everyone tried to conquer her. The kushites got their revenge and took over Egypt for about 100 years. From south of Khartoum to the Mediterranean the Kushites ruled and united and brought back some old gods. The Kushites made pharaohs of themselves and considered themselves much better and were more ardent supporters of their gods. Then the Syrians battled the Kushites for power until the Persians arrived and drove them out for good. The Roman Empire became strong around this time with Caesar at the helm, forming his bond with Cleopatra around 50bc. The Romans then took Egypt and fought the Kushites at the north of Sudan where finally a peace treaty was formed and the Kushites continued to live in relative peace, taking a lot of Egyptian mythology into their customs, as we see today in their Temples and Pyramids.
We waved the Naga German archeologists goodbye and took the dusty road back to Musawwarat, wondering how Tim was navigating the criss-cross tyre tracks across the desert. It was a very interesting day that that very few people will see.
In the afternoon we scan the Lion temple at Musawwarat with the 6000 scanner and I RTK GPS the rest of the hafir capturing the tops off the hills. This data will be used to
calculate the volume of the earth that would have been excavated – and thus the volume of water the hafir could have held. It was 17m deep at one stage, holding water for the temple. Remains of a stone trench show the water transportation to the Musawwarat temple. This is a big mission around of around three hours walking and the final round is done by 4×4 as I hold the GPS pole outside of the window as we drive around.
Another site is complete and under the belt! We are all happy but exhausted and we know that tomorrow we will leave Musawwarat and the isolated paradise of the camp, to go a few hours north to Meroe and see if we can scan some of the pyramids there.
Tonight Roshan makes curry and we celebrate the completion of the scanning of Musawwarat.
Tuesday 17th February – Musawwarat es-Sufra to Meroe, Sudan
Today we leave Musawwarat to go to Meroe, which lies along the east bank of the Nile, 200km North-East of Khartoum, so hopefully we can even have a swim in its murky mystical waters. There are around 200 pyramids at Meroe, many in ruins, a temple and an ancient bath. Also the remains of an old town settlement complete with fortress wall are there.
A colourful truck arrives two hours late at 11:30 which is not bad actually. We cram in the back like cattle in a baboon cage and speed off into the Sudanese desert. We eventually get to the tar road high-way. Sitting in the back of the baboon cage huge transport Lorries and busses overtake us on the narrow road where burst tyres lie every 25m. We arrive in Shendi and this place is like a shrine to all that is bad about the African city. There are no roads. You literally drive anywhere you want. Across open lots, through people’s back yards, over railway roads, it’s just sand and tyre tracks. Just point your car and dodge.
We buy supplies like benzene and vegetables and leave for Meroe. Arriving in this fabled town everything is just one colour: the colour of sand. Sandy roads, mud brick houses, sand coloured donkeys. A railroad runs right through the centre of Meroe with no barriers or warnings. It feels like the wild west. Mereo has also adopted Shendis road system. We
imagine that there is one road sign in Meroe and it points in the general directions of the places you want to go and so you head off picking the path as you desire.
We get to the German archeology camp in Meroe and have some tea. It’s in the middle of the village across from the train track. We drop off our luggage and point the truck in the general direction of the pyramids and head off across the bumpy terrain of the open desert. From a distance we see a monstrous sandstorm and soon are in it. The sand sweeps into the open back of truck and we are covered by the time we reach bottom of the dunes, marking the beginning of the Pyramid configuration. The Meroe pyramids stick out of the dunes as if to defy time and the limitations of human labour. There are three groups of pyramids and we trudge through the sand and up the dunes to see them . It’s a magnificent atmosphere walking amongst these giant triangular piles of stone, dark as if burnt by the desert sun. The sandy wind is blinding and its evident the pyramids don’t want to be scanned today. We take refuge in the offering room attached to a pyramid and hide away from the wind and sand.
Some locals offer camel ride to the tourists. A bit kitsch but Ralph and I have never been atop a camel and so we decide the time is nigh. We climb on top and are hoisted up into the air and pose unashamedly for pictures while we take a gentle walk around, it feels so high. The rest of the team is soon tempted and so everyone gets a go. Heinz looking like he’s spent half his life riding a camel.
Back at camp I have a sand grain in my eye and we struggle to remove it, then I get a moggie in my ear that buzzes for hours and we shine a torch into my ear hoping to lure it out. Supper is cooked by a famous cook and we sit under a tree afterwards smoking shisha and talking about archeology with the other German people here. A very different life, excavating and interpreting out in isolates areas. We’re off to bed early as the moggies bite.
Wednesday 18th February – Meroe
Today we scan if the wind is gone. Unfortunately it is not. So we go off to see the archeologists dig. They are working on a plan of the ancient walled village and are only excavating the top layer to get the layout. The outer defense wall is at least 1.5m thick
and the rooms are tiny. This could be for lack of space of maybe for it was a military base. Then we walk down to the Nile because it’s swim time! We walk past water canals watering the lands of wheat and beans. The Nile flows thick and strong and Heinz, Chris and I undress and take the plunge. It is the first time either of us has swum in this river, the biggest in Africa. The water is cool and refreshing and we swim against the current to stay in the same place. Apparently it’s a myth that bilharzia does not exist in the Nile. I like myths.
We then go see the royal city and ancient bath and also the temple where the head of the statue of Augustus was buried – the roman leader at the time of Jesus, and the one who plotted to overthrow Caesar. We go back to the camp and relax for the afternoon. The cook takes the truck for a spin and manages to completely destroy the drive shaft, twisting this thick piece of metal. Luckily we don’t need the truck anymore.
Thursday 19th February
Last night was our last night in the Sudan. Heinz and I awake early to catch our bus back to Khartoum– or rather it catches us. The bus conveniently stops right outside our camp and we hop on. It’s an old bus of course and things are thrown on the roof for storage. We settle in and the bus moves on as we wave goodbye and make plans to meet up with the rest of the team who are driving by car to Khartoum. So we are on our way on a bus in Sudan driving around the dusty streets of Meroe, across people’s back yards, down alleys and over railway tracks and since there seems to be no bus stations we just drive around and pick everyone up from their houses. More things are thrown on the roof and more people, timeless in their Arab garments, get on, but no one will sit next to me, us being the only two white people on board. Eventually I tell this little boy who is uncomfortably sitting on the floor in the isles to sit down next to me. There is lots of litter in the barren wasteland, including dead camels and donkeys; it is a very harsh environment. We eventually arrive in Khartoum and find a taxi, although the driver speaks no English. We write some stuff down for him on a piece of paper and he assures us all is ok though we struggle to agree or understand each other about the price. Heinz threatens to jump out about five times and eventually we just put our trust in this Sudanese man who speaks no English to find the Emirates airlines building in Khartoum.
We somehow manage to find the place, I actually saw the sign through a convenient hole in an old building, and go in and breathe the cool air-conditioned air. We eat some lunch at a takeaways and then go to a hotel and chill and use a proper toilet seat again after almost two weeks. Then the rest of the team arrives and we go to the museum. Roshan and I sit on the back of the bakkie driving through Khartoum at a time when westerners are not very popular since they want to arrest the Sudanese president for war crimes. The museum has quite a few interesting artifacts plus a temple or two that has been uprooted and relocated to the museum.
Then it’s off to the airport for more fun. We get there and to our expectations they won’t let our equipment out. This is because we don’t have the original letters from the customs official when we arrived in Sudan. This is after the customs official said he had to keep the original and gave us a copy. After a while we engage the help of an Emirates employee and finally get our equipment through. We board and breathe deep sighs. We made it through the Sudan in one piece!
After some tricky situations at the Dubai airport we are on board back to South Africa. This adventure has come to an end and it has been nothing short of amazing, with every challenge thrown our way and some spectacular memories to take home, not to mention an awesome heritage site done and documented for future generations!
Trip Campaigners:
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Prof. Heinz Ruther
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Christoph Held
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Roshan Bhurtha
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Ralph Schroeder
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Stephen Wessels
Equipment:
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Leica HDS 3000 Time of Flight 3D laser scanner
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Leica HDS 6000 Phase Shift 3D laser scanner
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Nikon D100, D200, 10.5mm fisheye lens and nodal ninja panorama head
Photo Gallery



























most antient place’s gallery i like it