Graffiti, some perhaps of the kind you’d find in a downtown back alley today, written on wonder-of-the-world architecture dedicated to wealth and power, Hedley mused, but he was quick to point out that’s not his field but that of the three archeologists on his team.is an associate professor of geography at SFU, a specialist in geographic visualization and spatial-interface research.
is the science of making measurements from photographs and it’s a technical pursuit full of other jargon a few pay-grades above your average person-on-the-street’s ability to follow sometimes.Article content Nick Hedley, an SFU geography professor who specializes in spatial reality capture, has prepared a 3D rendering of 2,000-year-old.graffiti, using ground-breaking, for the field of archaeology, technology as part of an SFU study of the walls of the Temple of Isis in Philae, Egypt. Undated handout photo, from Nick Hedley.