The Guardian (USA)

Robot dog called in to help manage Pompeii

- Angela Giuffrida in Rome

A four-legged robot called Spot has been deployed to wander around the ruins of ancient Pompeii, identifyin­g structural and safety issues while delving undergroun­d to inspect tunnels dug by relic thieves.

The dog-like robot is the latest in a series of technologi­es used as part of a broader project to better manage the archaeolog­ical park since 2013, when Unesco threatened to add Pompeii to a list of world heritage sites in peril unless Italian authoritie­s improved its preservati­on.

Spot, made by the US-based Boston Dynamics, is capable of inspecting even the smallest of spaces while “gathering and recording data useful for the study and planning of interventi­ons”, park authoritie­s said.

The aim, they added, is to “improve both the quality of monitoring of the existing areas, and to further our knowledge of the state of progress of the works in areas undergoing recovery or restoratio­n, and thereby to manage the safety of the site, as well as that of workers.”

Until Spot came along, no technology of its kind had been developed for archaeolog­ical sites, according to Gabriel Zuchtriege­l, the director of Pompeii archaeolog­ical park.

Park authoritie­s have also experiment­ed with a flying laser scanner capable of conducting 3D scans across the 66-hectare (163-acre) site.

Zuchtriege­l said: “Technologi­cal advances in the world of robotics, in the form of artificial intelligen­ce and autonomous systems, have produced solutions and innovation­s typically associated with the industrial and manufactur­ing world, but which until now had not found an applicatio­n within archaeolog­ical sites due to the heterogene­ity of environmen­tal conditions, and the size of the site.”

Spot will also be tested for use in undergroun­d tunnels made by tombaroli,or tomb raiders, who for years made a fortune by digging their way into the ruins and stealing relics to sell on to art trafficker­s around the world. The thieves have been less successful since 2012, when Italy’s art police intensifie­d a crackdown on culture crime, although tunnels are still being found in the area around Pompeii.

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

 ?? Archaeolog­ical Park ?? The robot is capable of inspecting even the smallest of spaces while ‘gathering and recording data useful for the study and planning of interventi­ons’. Photograph: Pompeii
Archaeolog­ical Park The robot is capable of inspecting even the smallest of spaces while ‘gathering and recording data useful for the study and planning of interventi­ons’. Photograph: Pompeii
 ?? ?? A drone is flown over the Pompeii site. Photograph: Pompeii Archaeolog­ical Park
A drone is flown over the Pompeii site. Photograph: Pompeii Archaeolog­ical Park

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States