michaelseangallagher: Jacqueline Rajuai, Google Kenya
michaelseangallagher: Jacqueline Rajuai, Google Kenya
michaelseangallagher: Jacqueline Rajuai, Google Kenya
michaelseangallagher: Jacqueline Rajuai, Google Kenya
michaelseangallagher: Jacqueline Rajuai, Google Kenya
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Francis Kirera, National Museums of Kenya speaks about how GIS is serving the needs of paleontologists in the Lake Turkana Basin Mapping project
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Francis Kirera, National Museums of Kenya speaks about how GIS is serving the needs of paleontologists in the Lake Turkana Basin Mapping project
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Francis Kirera, National Museums of Kenya speaks about how GIS is serving the needs of paleontologists in the Lake Turkana Basin Mapping project
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Francis Kirera, National Museums of Kenya speaks about how GIS is serving the needs of paleontologists in the Lake Turkana Basin Mapping project
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Francis Kirera, National Museums of Kenya speaks about how GIS is serving the needs of paleontologists in the Lake Turkana Basin Mapping project
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Francis Kirera, National Museums of Kenya speaks about how GIS is serving the needs of paleontologists in the Lake Turkana Basin Mapping project
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Francis Kirera, National Museums of Kenya speaks about how GIS is serving the needs of paleontologists in the Lake Turkana Basin Mapping project
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Francis Kirera, National Museums of Kenya speaks about how GIS is serving the needs of paleontologists in the Lake Turkana Basin Mapping project
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Francis Kirera, National Museums of Kenya speaks about how GIS is serving the needs of paleontologists in the Lake Turkana Basin Mapping project
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Francis Kirera, National Museums of Kenya speaks about how GIS is serving the needs of paleontologists in the Lake Turkana Basin Mapping project
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Francis Kirera, National Museums of Kenya speaks about how GIS is serving the needs of paleontologists in the Lake Turkana Basin Mapping project
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Francis Kirera, National Museums of Kenya speaks about how GIS is serving the needs of paleontologists in the Lake Turkana Basin Mapping project
michaelseangallagher: The audience.
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Issa Makarani, Director General, Zanzibar Stone Town Conservation and Development Authority
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Issa Makarani, Director General, Zanzibar Stone Town Conservation and Development Authority
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Issa Makarani, Director General, Zanzibar Stone Town Conservation and Development Authority
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Issa Makarani, Director General, Zanzibar Stone Town Conservation and Development Authority
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Issa Makarani, Director General, Zanzibar Stone Town Conservation and Development Authority
michaelseangallagher: Dr. Issa Makarani, Director General, Zanzibar Stone Town Conservation and Development Authority
michaelseangallagher: Prof. Felix Chami, Dept. of Archaeology, University of Dar es Salaam spoke about how changes in settlement, urbanization, and population growth are destroying heritage sites across the continent and how in many cases it is the incomplete (and yet only par
michaelseangallagher: Prof. Felix Chami, Dept. of Archaeology, University of Dar es Salaam spoke about how changes in settlement, urbanization, and population growth are destroying heritage sites across the continent and how in many cases it is the incomplete (and yet only par
michaelseangallagher: Prof. Felix Chami, Dept. of Archaeology, University of Dar es Salaam spoke about how changes in settlement, urbanization, and population growth are destroying heritage sites across the continent and how in many cases it is the incomplete (and yet only par
michaelseangallagher: Prof. Felix Chami detailing how many archaeological sites he surveyed and documented in the 1960's and 1970's have simply disappeared with the rise of urbanization and increased population growth