CRASL: Center for Research & Archaeology of the Southern Levant

Participants

CRASL Participants

CRASL draws on the many talents of a multi-disciplinary network of long-time associates in the USA and in Israel and welcomes you to join us and contribute whatever you have to offer.

CRASL Team Summer of 2010 CRASL Team Summer of 2010


Dr. Jessie A. Pincus - Project Director

Dr. Jessie A. Pincus doing a field study in Israel Dr. Jessie Pincus, appointed Faculty Fellow in the Texas A&M University CHC, Center for Heritage Conservation, works with the Department of Geology and Geophysics at Texas A&M University. She recently completed her doctoral thesis at Bar Ilan University in Israel, where she spent 2003 - 2009 focusing on geoarchaeological support projects. Her dissertation is entitled "Geoarchaeological Data Acquisition and Modeling with Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) of Ancient Agricultural Terraced Fields in the Negev and Tell es-Safi/Gath". She is a State of Israel licensed archaeologist. She recently taught the course in Soils for Construction and Foundations at Texas A&M, while working as a postdoctoral researcher.

Her undergraduate work was begun at Case Western Reserve University in Ohio and completed at the University of Miami in Florida. Her doctoral work was concentrated on geoarchaeological data acquisition and modeling using Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) for strategic planning and decision support. She has been working since 2005 at several sites in the Southern Levant, with an emphasis on rough terrain GPR with archaeological support application, as well as interfacing of results in a GIS database model. Her work was under the supervision of Professor Aren Maeir, Professor Hanoch Lavee of the Department of Geography, Bar-Ilan University, and Dr. Moti Haiman of The Martin (Szusz) Department of Land of Israel Studies and Archaeology and the Israel Antiquities Authority. Professor Ben K. Sternberg, Ph.D., Director of the Laboratory for Advanced Subsurface Imaging, University of Arizona has also guided her in an advisory role towards GPR post-processing analysis throughout her career.

Dr. Jessie Pincus overlooking the Old City of Jerusalem in 2010 In addition to her recent doctoral work, Jessie has completed numerous projects and archaeogeophysical surveys throughout Israel. These sites include Kiryat Anavim Cemetery and Tel Mond Cemetery, forensics projects in support of the Israel Defense Forces' MIA department; and Hazor Archaeological Project, Tell es-Safi/Philistine Gath, City of David Excavations, Neolithic Sha'ar HaGolan Archaeological Project, and Givat Sher archaeological projects to name a few. Recent and current projects include Underground Jerusalem, Ancient Avdat, and select sites in Jerusalem and the biblical city of Nazareth. Her doctoral work has focused on advanced data modeling of numerous archaeological, geological, geophysical, hydrological and climatic datasets, including data acquisition in the Negev desert at her 5 research sites of Avdat, Nizzana, Shivta, the Yatir Forest, and Tell es-Safi/Gath. She has also worked at several sites in the USA, including the Miami Circle in Florida, one of the few Prehistoric architectural structure remains in the country, the ancient Ortona canals in Central Florida, and Little Salt Springs on the west coast of Florida. She has published portions of her work in several journals and research editions.

Jessie brings specialized experience in rough-terrain situations where on-site innovation allows her to produce useful reports for both the researchers and professionals in the field.


Michael S. Pincus - CRASL Director

Michael S. Pincus on GPR Survey in Israel Michael S. Pincus is an Information Technology executive, strategist, and content analyst, who has given professional counsel to government, defense, and commercial enterprises in many fields over the last 25 years. Operating since 1986 through his US company Mnemotrix Systems, Inc., he provides custom intelligent agent database, and information mining, fusion and analysis services hosted and distributed over the Internet to corporate clients world-wide. His work includes advanced methods in data mining and fusion, for retrieving and correlating text and images using concepts and ideas and in natural language.

Having founded Thunderstone Software/Expansion Programs International, Inc. in 1981, which became a world leader in advanced information technology (builder of the search technology for eBay and Dogpile), he went on to design and implement advanced computing applications for NASA, the US Dept of Agriculture, the Dept of Energy, the Dept of Defense and other branches of the U.S. Government, for private corporations and educational institutions worldwide, and contributed to much of the early R&D in Artificial Intelligence in the field of Information Mining and Data Fusion.

His work in the field of information mining and fusion was first introduced into the defense and aerospace world by Harry Zubkoff who was the editor in chief of Defense Media Review and Chief of the Pentagon's daily news publication "Current News". Zubkoff served every Secretary of Defense from Louis Johnson to Caspar Weinberger. Mr. Pincus worked personally with Dr. Jonas Salk of the Salk Institute and Foundation building a unique medical informatics research database system which Dr. Salk and his associates used to strategically assist AIDS and retro-virus disease researchers worldwide, before his untimely death in 1995. He accumulated a great deal of international business experience, having pursued business extensively in Japan and the Pacific Rim, in Europe and in the Middle East. Mr. Pincus has built and hosted over 250 Business Intelligence, Market and Trend Analysis Systems for Leading Fortune 1000 companies.

In 2005, after setting up research offices in Israel, he established Mnemotrix Israel, Ltd., to continue delivering these information services in the Middle East and to create new innovations in intelligent database design, geographic information systems utilizing spatial analysis methods and other unique technology. Mr. Pincus, operating through Mnemotrix Israel, Ltd., in his capacity as a research associate of Bar Ilan University, Martin Szusz Dept of Land of Israel Studies and as the Director of Technology Research for Israel's ADASR Project (Ancient Desert Agriculture Systems Revived) he built and hosts a Smart GIS (Geographical Information System) for an international community of scientists and researchers concerned with the complex relationships of agriculture, migration, and conflict in the Negev Desert of Israel from ancient times to the present.

Jessie with her Dad in the Negev
Jessie with her Dad
This system, built and accessible through the Internet for this project, represents a paradigm shift in Smart Geo-Referencing and dynamic spatial analysis capability as it applies to GIS making use of SQL database information, images and real-time mapping based on a researcher's queries.

In 2006 he established Imaginative Access Ltd, an Israeli company focused on building using "Imaginative Access" for museums and libraries worldwide. In recent years he returned to the US basing his operations in College Station near Texas A&M, where he works on activities centered around promoting the Israel-Texas High Technology Corridor.

Mr. Pincus's career spans over twenty-five years working with world class CEO's, scientists, and industry professionals to improve their strategic analysis skills, effectiveness, and competitive advantage.


Dr. Moti Haiman - ADASR Director

Dr. Moti Haiman surveying in the Negev Moti Haiman heads the ADASR project, Ancient Desert Agriculture Systems Revived, contributing all his time and several decades of experience day after day surveying the Negev to this project. Moti brings his experience from Israel Antiquities as well as his academic experience at Bar Ilan University, and his constant enthusiasm for new ideas in this remote region.

Educated at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, he obtained his PhD in Archaeology in 1993, with his dissertation entitled "Early Settlement Patterns of the Negev Highlands: Analysis of the Findings of the Negev Emergency Survey 1979-1989", under Prof. Avraham Negev and Prof. Amihai Mazar.

Beginning his career in the 1970's as a research assistant in the Department of Archaeology at Ben Gurion University, he became Head of the Survey Team for the Negev Emergency Project in the Department of Antiquities, where he learned the Negev walking it step by step. Moti walks with Jessie Pincus his research assistant at Avdat in the Negev in 2005 From 1991-1993 he published his surveys and excavations under the aegis of the Israel Antiquities Authority. In 1994 he became Head of the Survey Department for the IAA, where he has continued to this day in 2010 as a Research Archaeologist.

In 2004 Moti took on the ADASR Project, Ancient Desert Agriculture Systems Revised. In the heart of the wilderness of the Southern Levant, there is a unique phenomenon of an abundance of ancient agriculture systems spread throughout this very arid region disclosing ancient systems that are as intriguing as they are mysterious. The ADASR project began the job of plotting these widespread features into an intelligently searchable GIS.

In 2010 Moti provides CRASL with his lifetime network of desert science professionals and access to remote places only imagined by outsiders.


Dr. Aren Maeir - Academic Advisor

Aren Maeir of Bar Ilan University Aren Maeir is a professor at Bar Ilan University and director of the Tell es-Safi/Gath Archaeological Project. Born in 1958 in Rochester, New York, USA, he moved to Israel in 1969 and has lived there since. Following his service in the Israel Defence Forces (where he reached the rank of captain), he did his undergraduate and graduate studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem (PhD 1997 summa cum laude), and did a post-doctorate (2002-2003) at the (now defunct) Dibner Institute for the History of Science and Technology at MIT. He has been teaching at Bar-Ilan University since 1993, and acted as doctoral advisor for Jessie Pincus during her program there. He has participated in, and directed, numerous archaeological excavations in Israel, including at the following sites: Jerusalem, Hazor, Yoqneam, Tell Qasile, Beth-Shean, and since 1996, at Tell es-Safi/Gath.

His expertise lies in the Bronze and Iron Age cultures of the Eastern Mediterranean, with special emphasis on those of the Ancient Levant. Among the topics that he has studied are: ancient trade; metallurgy; pottery production and provenience; scientific applications in archaeology; archaeological survey; the archaeology of Jerusalem; The Middle Bronze Age of the Levant; chronology of the 2nd Millennium BCE; the Sea Peoples and the Philistines; relations between Egypt and the Levant; ancient weapons and warfare; ancient cult and religion.

Between 2005 and 2007 he served as the Chairman of the Martin (Szusz) Department of Land of Israel Studies and Archaeology at Bar-Ilan University. Along with Prof. Steve Weiner of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, he initiated and co-directs a joint Bar-Ilan University/Weizmann Institute of Science program in Archaeological Science.

Since 1996 he has directed the Tell es-Safi/Gath Archaeological Project, excavating the ancient site of Tell es-Safi, which is identified as Canaanite and Philistine Gath (one of the five cities of the Philistines mentioned in the Bible, the home of Goliath).


Robert S. Carr - Heritage Conservation

Bob Carr in Jerusalem 2010 Bob Carr co-founded the Archaeological and Historical Conservancy of Florida in 1985. He has served as its full time director since 1999. He has worked as an archaeologist with the State of Florida's Division of Historic Resources and with the National Park Service. He was Miami-Dade County's first archaeologist and became the County's Historic Preservation Director in 1999. Bob has a Master's Degree in Anthropology from Florida State University. He is a former editor of the Florida Anthropologist and former president of the Florida Archaeological Council. He is a recipient of the Bullen Award, and received Florida's Historic Preservation Award in 2003.

With decades of experience in heritage conservation and learning projects in the US and the Bahamas, and years of working closely with Dr. Jessie Pincus and other CRASL participants in Florida, in 2010 Bob turns his attention to Classical Archaeology. He brings his expertise in managing a working 501(c) to CRASL and his enthusiasm for our many projects to come in the Southern Levant. This includes his experience in bringing "heritage trails" into municipality planning.


Dr. Motti Aviam Dr. Motti Aviam

Mordechai Aviam was for 11 years the District Archaeologist of the Western Galilee for the Israel Antiquities Authority. Dr. Aviam is the Director of the "Institute for Galilean Archaeology" at the Kinneret Academic College, Israel, in collaboration with the Miller Center for Contemporary Judaism, University of Miami. He also teaches at the Ort Brau de College at Karmiel.

Among other projects, Dr. Aviam is currently involved in archaeology and restoration at Yodefat, a project which CRASL supports.


Shmuel Silinsky - Jerusalem Coordinator

Shmuel Silinsky in Jerusalem 2010 Born in New Jersey, Shmuel obtained a BSc at Cornell University in 1972 in Agriculture with a concentration in Communication Arts. His study of agriculture was mainly ornamental horticulture, including soils, plant pathology, plants and man, and rural sociology, and included coursework in archaeology in the Dept of History of Art and in the Classics Dept. The focus was on Old World civilizations of the eastern Mediterranean, primarily Pre-Classical such as Minoan, Mycenaean, Egyptian, etc.

In 1980 he undertook an independent study in Medicinal Plants and Pharmacognocy (plant sources of medicines) with a focus on 19th and early 20th century pharmacology.

In 1981 he moved to Jerusalem where he remains to this day having raised a family and worked as a Jerusalem educator, where he has man years of experience teaching and working in cooperative manner with various local groups and communities. He is considered an expert in the history and development of Jerusalem, especially the Old City.

Shmuel's horticultural experience includes extensive independent specialty work with desert plants. He has kept as a hobby a personal collection of cacti and succulents for many years, including many rare and unusual specimens, including independent research on the uses of the plants by native peoples. He has brought his extensive experience in landscape design from California into Jerusalem.

Through a lifetime friendship with Mike Pincus, Shmuel has given his many unique skills and qualities towards the goals of CRASL, and provides unique access to nooks and crannies in Jerusalem which are off the beaten path.


Kathy W. Pincus - IT Director

Kathy in the Jerusalem bougainvillea during 2010 summer surveys Kathy W. Pincus is an Information and Database design specialist with expertise in applying advanced text analysis algorithms to complex information systems tasks including real-time applications across networks and the Internet. She is an expert in the design and integration of GIS (Geographic Information Systems) with near surface remote sensing applications. She has held the position of CIO and CTO for Mnemotrix Systems, Inc. since it began in 1986 as a technology developer and integrator for Advanced Information Systems applications. Mnemotrix has provided hosted online services where advanced technology solutions are required, always using state-of-the-art solutions.

Kathy runs the GPR System for a Negev survey Kathy has many years of hands-on experience in building and supporting advanced information processing applications, having participated in numerous projects and technical programs over the years. Having helped to found Thunderstone Software/Expansion Programs International, Inc. in 1981, which became a world leader in advanced information technology, she assisted in the design and implementation of hundreds of text application systems and computing applications for NASA, the Dept of Agriculture, the Dept of Energy, the Dept of Defense and other branches of the U.S. Government, for private corporations and educational institutions worldwide, and contributed to much of the early R&D in Artificial Intelligence in the field of Information Mining and Data Fusion.

In recent years she has focused on creating technical breakthroughs using Mnemotrix's intelligent text software and tools combined with state-of-the-art GIS technology, so that Mnemotrix is able to provide Text-to-GIS and GIS-to-Text solutions which do not exist elsewhere. She has extensive hands-on experience working in geoarchaeological support throughout Israel, by handling the data processing and systems functions for GPR (Ground Penetrating Radar) surveys and is licensed by GSSI (Geophysical Survey Systems, Inc.) in this field. She has helped to create a GIS data model for open area archaeology in ancient agriculture which plots 30 years of survey reports on a high resolution map of Israel, in conjunction with the ADASR (Ancient Desert Agriculture Systems Revived) Project.

Currently she divides her time between Texas and Israel supporting all the many IT needs for CRASL, and working on specialized applications in both worlds.

Geophysical Support Services, Smart GIS Technology, and website design,
hosting, and maintenance are provided by Mnemotrix Systems, Inc.
Mnemotrix Systems, Inc.