CoDiFi
Allison Barden and Connor Rowe capture the view from the inside of a solitary confinement cell on Alcatraz Island while documented by Daniela Alaniz-Roux.
Allison Barden and Connor Rowe capture the view from the inside of a solitary confinement cell on Alcatraz Island while documented by Daniela Alaniz-Roux.
Photographs in this collection have been produced by Kathleen Markham,
Daniela Alaniz-Roux, Allison Barden, and Connor Rowe at request of UC
Berkeley Anthropology 136k class, for the purposes of digitally documenting
the cultural heritage of Alcatraz Island with intent to gain greater insight
into the island’s cultural history through the use of photographic
technology.
Photographs in this collection were captured on Friday April 8, 2011,
between 9:00 AM and 6:00 PM Pacific Time, under sunny and windy conditions.
Canon DSLR XTI, CanonT2i, Canon S95, and a Sony Cybershot. Lenses used with
the Canon T2i include a Macro 60mm and Telephoto 70-200 lens, as well as its
included kit 18-55mm lens. A 17-85mm lens was used with the Canon XTI. A
tripod was used for macro, telephoto, HDR, and photogrammetry shots. The
photos were post-processed in Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3.
Description written by Kathleen Markham, following Alonso C. Addison’s
proposed virtual heritage metadata format in his chapter "The Vanishing
Virtual" in New Heritage: New Media and Cultural Heritage, edited by Kalay,
et al., and published by Routledge in 2007.
Alcatraz Island (37.826667°N 122.423333°W), located in the San Francisco
Bay, is a cultural heritage site constituting a part of the Golden Gate
National Recreation Area (GGNRA) under the management of the National Park
Service. The park is currently open to visitors by way of privately operated
ferries, yet the recorded history of island begins with the founding of a
United States Military fort and Military prison in 1850. Previous to the
military garrisoning of the island the site had been used by Native American
tribes, but the U.S. Military’s stronghold on the island continued until
1934 when the fort was refurbished to become a maximum security Federal
Penitentiary. During Alcatraz’s time as a federal prison the island became
home to many infamous criminals and functioned as the stage for multiple
riots and escape attempts. Due to the challenges posed by running a maximum
security prison on the island, the Federal Bureau of Prisons deemed the
penitentiary too expensive to fund and consequently the prison was shut down
in 1963. After lying vacant for years the land was unofficially reclaimed by
Native American Indians of various tribes on November 20, 1969 with the
justification that the Treaty of Fort Laramie established in 1868 entitling
Native peoples to any unused surplus federal property. The Indian occupation
of the Island continued into 1971 until the feasibility of the occupation
waned due in part to the difficulty of continuing a steady flow of supplies
to the island. After nineteen months of residing in the island, the
occupiers were forcibly removed by government officials on June 11, 1971.
The island’s notorious history began to draw in tourism in 1973, and in 1976
Alcatraz Island was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in
recognition of its long and varied history. The park has continued to draw
visitors over the last four decades and is recognized as one of richest
sites of cultural heritage in the San Francisco Bay Area.
All photos Copyright ©2011 Center for Digital Archaeology, Berkeley CA
Creative Commons creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
For more information contact Center for Digital Archaeology, Berkeley, CA,
94720 or visit www.codifi.info/licensing
For more facts and information about Alcatraz, please visit
Allison Barden and Connor Rowe capture the view from the inside of a solitary confinement cell on Alcatraz Island while documented by Daniela Alaniz-Roux.
Allison Barden and Connor Rowe capture the view from the inside of a solitary confinement cell on Alcatraz Island while documented by Daniela Alaniz-Roux.
Photographs in this collection have been produced by Kathleen Markham,
Daniela Alaniz-Roux, Allison Barden, and Connor Rowe at request of UC
Berkeley Anthropology 136k class, for the purposes of digitally documenting
the cultural heritage of Alcatraz Island with intent to gain greater insight
into the island’s cultural history through the use of photographic
technology.
Photographs in this collection were captured on Friday April 8, 2011,
between 9:00 AM and 6:00 PM Pacific Time, under sunny and windy conditions.
Canon DSLR XTI, CanonT2i, Canon S95, and a Sony Cybershot. Lenses used with
the Canon T2i include a Macro 60mm and Telephoto 70-200 lens, as well as its
included kit 18-55mm lens. A 17-85mm lens was used with the Canon XTI. A
tripod was used for macro, telephoto, HDR, and photogrammetry shots. The
photos were post-processed in Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3.
Description written by Kathleen Markham, following Alonso C. Addison’s
proposed virtual heritage metadata format in his chapter "The Vanishing
Virtual" in New Heritage: New Media and Cultural Heritage, edited by Kalay,
et al., and published by Routledge in 2007.
Alcatraz Island (37.826667°N 122.423333°W), located in the San Francisco
Bay, is a cultural heritage site constituting a part of the Golden Gate
National Recreation Area (GGNRA) under the management of the National Park
Service. The park is currently open to visitors by way of privately operated
ferries, yet the recorded history of island begins with the founding of a
United States Military fort and Military prison in 1850. Previous to the
military garrisoning of the island the site had been used by Native American
tribes, but the U.S. Military’s stronghold on the island continued until
1934 when the fort was refurbished to become a maximum security Federal
Penitentiary. During Alcatraz’s time as a federal prison the island became
home to many infamous criminals and functioned as the stage for multiple
riots and escape attempts. Due to the challenges posed by running a maximum
security prison on the island, the Federal Bureau of Prisons deemed the
penitentiary too expensive to fund and consequently the prison was shut down
in 1963. After lying vacant for years the land was unofficially reclaimed by
Native American Indians of various tribes on November 20, 1969 with the
justification that the Treaty of Fort Laramie established in 1868 entitling
Native peoples to any unused surplus federal property. The Indian occupation
of the Island continued into 1971 until the feasibility of the occupation
waned due in part to the difficulty of continuing a steady flow of supplies
to the island. After nineteen months of residing in the island, the
occupiers were forcibly removed by government officials on June 11, 1971.
The island’s notorious history began to draw in tourism in 1973, and in 1976
Alcatraz Island was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in
recognition of its long and varied history. The park has continued to draw
visitors over the last four decades and is recognized as one of richest
sites of cultural heritage in the San Francisco Bay Area.
All photos Copyright ©2011 Center for Digital Archaeology, Berkeley CA
Creative Commons creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
For more information contact Center for Digital Archaeology, Berkeley, CA,
94720 or visit www.codifi.info/licensing
For more facts and information about Alcatraz, please visit