CoDiFi
EBW01_CAM16-181.jpg
Photographs in this collection have been produced by Aimee ODea, Justin Thach, Kenneth Chiu, Liz Dolinar, and Ashley Vink at the request of UC Berkeley Anthropology 136e class, at the request of Michael Ashley for the UC Berkeley Anthropology 136e class, Spring 2011. This collection documents the walking path from Embarcadero Bart station to Pier 39 then to North Beach area, with the intent to gain more of a spacial understanding of different heritage sites located in San Francisco.
Photographs in this collection were captured on Monday April 11, 2011, between 7:00 AM and 10:00 PM Pacific Time, under cloudy and overcast conditions. Photos were captured primarily with a Nikon D80 with some supplementary documentation photos by a Panasonic Lumix. The photos were developed in Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3.
Pier 39(37° 48’ 30’’ N, 122° 24’ 56’’ W), located between Alcatraz and North Beach in Fisherman’s Wharf , is a major tourist attraction that has history dating back to the Gold Rush. During the Gold Rush, Chinese immigrant in their Junk boats fished and provided shrimp, oysters, and salmon to the miners. Later Italian fisherman joined and fished for Dungeness Crab which they sold along the beaches. Still to the present day, Fisherman’s wharf has remained home base for San Francisco's fishing fleet. Today the area considered one of the busiest and well known tourist attraction in Northern California. Popular spots located near by include Pier 39, San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park, the Cannery Shopping Center, Ghirardelli Square, a Ripley's Believe it or Not museum, the Musée Mécanique, the Wax Museum at Fisherman's Wharf, Forbes Island, bars and restaurants that serve fresh seafood.
Description written by Ashley Vink, follows 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.
Further information about can be found at www.fishermanswharf.org/history.aspx. All photos Copyright ©2011 Center for Digital Archaeology, Berkeley CA, licensed under Creative Commons BY-NC 3.0
For more information contact Center for Digital Archaeology, Berkeley, CA, 94720 or visit www.codifi.info/licensing
ORIGINAL FILENAME:
EBW01_CAM16-181.jpg
EBW01_CAM16-181.jpg
Photographs in this collection have been produced by Aimee ODea, Justin Thach, Kenneth Chiu, Liz Dolinar, and Ashley Vink at the request of UC Berkeley Anthropology 136e class, at the request of Michael Ashley for the UC Berkeley Anthropology 136e class, Spring 2011. This collection documents the walking path from Embarcadero Bart station to Pier 39 then to North Beach area, with the intent to gain more of a spacial understanding of different heritage sites located in San Francisco.
Photographs in this collection were captured on Monday April 11, 2011, between 7:00 AM and 10:00 PM Pacific Time, under cloudy and overcast conditions. Photos were captured primarily with a Nikon D80 with some supplementary documentation photos by a Panasonic Lumix. The photos were developed in Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3.
Pier 39(37° 48’ 30’’ N, 122° 24’ 56’’ W), located between Alcatraz and North Beach in Fisherman’s Wharf , is a major tourist attraction that has history dating back to the Gold Rush. During the Gold Rush, Chinese immigrant in their Junk boats fished and provided shrimp, oysters, and salmon to the miners. Later Italian fisherman joined and fished for Dungeness Crab which they sold along the beaches. Still to the present day, Fisherman’s wharf has remained home base for San Francisco's fishing fleet. Today the area considered one of the busiest and well known tourist attraction in Northern California. Popular spots located near by include Pier 39, San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park, the Cannery Shopping Center, Ghirardelli Square, a Ripley's Believe it or Not museum, the Musée Mécanique, the Wax Museum at Fisherman's Wharf, Forbes Island, bars and restaurants that serve fresh seafood.
Description written by Ashley Vink, follows 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.
Further information about can be found at www.fishermanswharf.org/history.aspx. All photos Copyright ©2011 Center for Digital Archaeology, Berkeley CA, licensed under Creative Commons BY-NC 3.0
For more information contact Center for Digital Archaeology, Berkeley, CA, 94720 or visit www.codifi.info/licensing
ORIGINAL FILENAME:
EBW01_CAM16-181.jpg