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You are here: Home / Expertise Search / Woltman, Anna
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Project Bullets, Shrapnel, Case, and Canister: Archeology and GIS at the Piper Farm (Recording Unavailable)
Union and Confederate forces fought at Antietam Creek near Sharpsburg, Maryland, on September 17, 1862. It was the bloodiest single-day battle in American military history with nearly 23,000 dead, wounded, and missing. Some of the fiercest fighting occurred around the Sunken Road -- the northern boundary of the Henry Piper farm. Over four field seasons, archaeologists conducted systematic metal-detector surveys of the Piper Orchard, site of the Confederates’ retreat from the Sunken Road and their stand to hold the center, Caldwell’s Union advance, and the senseless charge of the 7th Maine Infantry Regiment. A combination of GIS analysis, 3-D terrain modeling, viewshed analysis, and a review of the historical record, resulted in the identification of unit positions and movements derived from an examination of 2,033 military artifacts. This study provides a more detailed understanding of the events at Piper Farm and demonstrates potential applications to other battlefield landscapes.
Located in National Park Service Spotlights / 2016 Spotlight on National Park Resources
Project Closing Remarks from the Spotlight on National Park Resources in the National Capital Region
Perry Wheelock- Associate Regional Director, Resource Stewardship and Science, NPS, National Capital Region
Located in National Park Service Spotlights / 2016 Spotlight on National Park Resources
Project Determining the Appropriate Unit of Management Among Brook Trout Populations Exhibiting Prodigious Neutral Genetic Differentiation and Cryptic Metapopulations in the Chesapeake Bay Drainages with Emphasis on Catoctin Mountain Park
Tim King- Fishery Biologist (Genomics), U.S. Geological Survey, Leetown Science Center
Located in National Park Service Spotlights / 2016 Spotlight on National Park Resources
Project Gone but not Forgotten: Storer College
Elaine Eff- Former Director, Cultural Conservation Program, Maryland Historical Trust
Located in National Park Service Spotlights / 2016 Spotlight on National Park Resources
Project Integrating Cultural Resource Preservation Priorities at a Landscape Scale: Introduction to the collaborative research program being sponsored jointly by the NPS and Appalachian Landscape Conservation Cooperative
Jean Brennan- Science Coordinator, Appalachian Landscape Conservation Cooperative (LCC)
Located in National Park Service Spotlights / 2016 Spotlight on National Park Resources
Project Inventory of Rare Groundwater Invertebrates and Their Habitats in National Capital Parks East Parks
David Culver, Emeritus Professor, American University Department of Biology presented for Jenna Keany, Graduate Student American University Department of Environmental Science
Located in National Park Service Spotlights / 2016 Spotlight on National Park Resources
Project Joint Influence of Deer Management and an Invasive Grass on Tree Seedling Establishment at Catoctin Mountain Park
John Paul Schmit- Quantitative Ecologist, NPS, National Capital Region Inventory and Monitoring Program
Located in National Park Service Spotlights / 2016 Spotlight on National Park Resources
Project Troff document Movement and Gathering Across Time: A Preliminary Report on the Potomac River Gorge Environmental History and Historic Resource Study Project
Kirsten Crase- Research Associate & Project Director, University of Maryland School of Architecture Planning and Preservation
Located in National Park Service Spotlights / 2016 Spotlight on National Park Resources
Project National Historic Preservation Act Section 106 Archeology Contributions: Successes (and Shortcomings) in Unexpected Situations at Two Historic Sites of the George Washington Memorial Parkway
Matthew Virta- Cultural Resources Program Manager, George Washington Memorial Parkway
Located in National Park Service Spotlights / 2016 Spotlight on National Park Resources
Project New Sampling Design Reveals Hotspots for Brook Trout Recruitment in Catoctin Mountain Park
Nathaniel Hitt- Aquatic Ecologist, U.S. Geological Survey, Leetown Science Center
Located in National Park Service Spotlights / 2016 Spotlight on National Park Resources