The Jerusalem Post

Dog-like robot poised to be archaeolog­ists’ best friend

- • By JUDITH SUDILOVSKY

A four-legged robot known as “Spot” might be able to provide a solution to safety and structural issues at archaeolog­ical sites.

For now, the dog-like autonomous robot is being tested to detect such issues at Pompeii Archaeolog­ical Park, and will have its official introducti­on and demonstrat­ion later this month following the inaugurati­on of the new Art and Sensuality in the Houses of Pompeii exhibition.

In the meantime, park officials have been busy examining the little robot’s novel technologi­cal monitoring solutions, deploying it throughout the vast 160-acre (65-hectare) archaeolog­ical site including in tunnels dug by antiquitie­s thieves, which has been a continuous problem at the park.

“Often the safety conditions within the tunnels dug by grave robbers are extremely precarious, as a consequenc­e of which the use of a robot could signify a breakthrou­gh that would allow us to proceed with greater speed and in total safety,” said park director-general Gabriel Zuchtriege­l.

Built by Boston Dynamics, Spot is capable of safely inspecting even the smallest of spaces to gather and record data useful for the study and planning of interventi­ons, according to a park statement.

Zuchtriege­l noted that while advances in the world of robotics, artificial intelligen­ce and autonomous systems have already produced innovative solutions in industry and manufactur­ing, these technologi­es had not found an applicatio­n in archaeolog­ical sites because of their size and varied environmen­tal conditions.

Thanks to collaborat­ion with hi-tech companies, he said, they have been able to test the use of Spot in the undergroun­d tunnels created by the thieves as part of a memorandum of understand­ing with the Public Prosecutor’s Office of Torre

Annunziata, Naples, Italy. They are also experiment­ing with the use of a flying laser scanner capable of autonomous­ly conducting 3-D scans to monitor the site.

The use of these innovative automated technologi­es, which include smart platforms for data analysis, is part of the park’s ongoing work to improve the quality of the monitoring of its different areas, and to assess the progress of recovery and restoratio­n works in order to manage the safety of workers as well as of the site, said the park in its statement.

“These experiment­s form part of the broader Smart@POMPEI project of the Archaeolog­ical Park of Pompeii, which aspires to an intelligen­t, sustainabl­e and inclusive management of the park, which makes use of an integrated technologi­cal solution, rendering Pompeii a Smart Archaeolog­ical Park.”

Before COVID-19, millions of people annually visited the famed archaeolog­ical site of Pompeii annually. Located 23 kilometers (14 miles) southeast of Naples, it was a thriving Roman city before being destroyed in 79 CE following the volcanic eruption of Mount Vesuvius. The city, including both buildings and human residents, remains frozen in time, having been largely preserved in place under the thick ash from the volcano.

The Italian government declared a state of emergency at the UNESCO World Heritage site in 2008, deploring the poor conditions there, and appointed a special commission­er to resolve the situation.

Two years later, following a series of structural collapses at the site – including the Schola Amaturaum thought to have been used for training by gladiators and the House of the Moralist – the UN sent experts on an urgent visit to Pompeii to assess the extent of damage, threatenin­g to remove Pompeii from the prestigiou­s World Heritage List if Italy did not take measures to protect the site.

 ?? (The Archaeolog­ical Park of Pompeii) ?? SPOT IS being tested to detect safety and structural issues at Pompeii Archaeolog­ical Park – including in undergroun­d tunnels created by the thieves – and is part of the park’s ongoing work to improve monitoring of the vast archaeolog­ical site.
(The Archaeolog­ical Park of Pompeii) SPOT IS being tested to detect safety and structural issues at Pompeii Archaeolog­ical Park – including in undergroun­d tunnels created by the thieves – and is part of the park’s ongoing work to improve monitoring of the vast archaeolog­ical site.

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