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Caroline Diemer
  • Archaeology and College of Letters
  • Class of 2018
  • San Jose, CA

Caroline Diemer Showcases Research at Visualizing Knowledge Exhibition

2017 May 22

Caroline Diemer was one of several students to present a project at Wesleyan's first student visual knowledge and data visualization exhibition on May 12. Students were asked to showcase how they conveyed or established information in a mainly non-verbal form.

Diemer's project was titled, “Games and Gender in Ancient Rome.” Together with two other students, she used a 3-D printer to create a Roman articulated doll from the 4th century; a laser wood cut to recreate a dice tower or pyrgus, also from the 4th century; and a 3-D printer to create a model of Knucklebones, a common gaming item used in ancient Greece and Egypt. Knucklebones were originally the anklebone of either a sheep, goat or cow.

The project won second prize.