How to Explore the Field Guide
1 2019-01-09T18:51:08-08:00 The 2018-2019 Mellon Sawyer Seminar at UCSB 825abd0261ed10262ffe105a408c697a541ff4bf 32617 22 This page describes the routes one might take through the Field Guide plain 2021-07-22T13:25:13-07:00 The 2018-2019 Mellon Sawyer Seminar at UCSB 825abd0261ed10262ffe105a408c697a541ff4bfPage
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Composite |
is live | scalar:isLive | 1 |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-09T18:51:08-08:00 |
Version 22
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.22 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 22 |
title | dcterms:title | How to Explore the Field Guide |
description | dcterms:description | This page describes the routes one might take through the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara is a multimedia narrative map that contains items created by the graduate students of the Fall 2018 Mellon Sawyer Seminar at the University of California, Santa Barbara, over the course of their quarter-long site-based research on the history of oil in Santa Barbara County. The Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the map on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. Along this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by using the visualization tool, which you can access by hovering over the compass icon at the top left of any page. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by using the search function. Click the magnifying glass at the top of any page to do keyword searches, creating your own path. By offering a map-based tour, various visualization tools, and keyword search routes, Scalar provides the viewer with a range of options for engagement. For your first visit, we would encourage you to follow the path laid out on the map. Imagine yourself as a participant in a guided tour of each site, driving up Highway 101 and looking out at the ocean, imagining all of the forms of life that have and continue to move through a place that has been so powerfully shaped by oil. We invite you to conceive of Santa Barbara County as one local node in a globalized network of energy production, distribution, and consumption. Understanding one region’s co-constitutive history with oil production provides a foothold in the larger slippery global system of oil extraction, refinement, transportation, and use. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2021-07-22T13:25:13-07:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 21
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.21 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 21 |
title | dcterms:title | How to Explore the Field Guide |
description | dcterms:description | This page describes the routes one might take through the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara is a multimedia narrative map that contains items created by the graduate students of the Fall 2018 Mellon Sawyer Seminar at the University of California, Santa Barbara, over the course of their site-based research on the history of oil in Santa Barbara County. The Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the map on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. Along this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by using the visualization tool, which you can access by hovering over the compass icon at the top left of any page. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by using the search function. Click the magnifying glass at the top of any page to do keyword searches, creating your own path. By offering a map-based tour, various visualization tools, and keyword search routes, Scalar provides the viewer with a range of options for engagement. For your first visit, we would encourage you to follow the path laid out on the map. Imagine yourself as a participant in a guided tour of each site, driving up Highway 101 and looking out at the ocean, imagining all of the forms of life that have and continue to move through a place that has been so powerfully shaped by oil. We invite you to conceive of Santa Barbara County as one local node in a globalized network of energy production, distribution, and consumption. Understanding one region’s co-constitutive history with oil production provides a foothold in the larger slippery global system of oil extraction, refinement, transportation, and use. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2021-07-21T12:15:13-07:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 20
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.20 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 20 |
title | dcterms:title | How to Explore the Field Guide |
description | dcterms:description | This page describes the routes one might take through the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara is a multimedia narrative map that contains items created by the graduate students of the Fall 2018 Mellon Sawyer Seminar at the University of California, Santa Barbara, over the course of their site-based research on the history of oil in Santa Barbara County. The Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the map on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. Along this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by using the visualization tool, which you can access by hovering over the compass icon at the top left of any page. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by using the search function (click the magnifying glass at the top of any page) to do keyword searches, creating your own path. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and locations are all potential search terms. By offering a map-based tour, various visualization tools, and metadata search routes, Scalar provides the viewer with a range of options for engagement. For your first visit, we would encourage you to follow the path laid out by the map. Imagine yourself as a participant in the guided tour of each site, driving up the 101 and looking out at the ocean, imagining, along with the Refuio team, all of the forms of life that have and continue to move through this place that has been so powerfully shaped by oil. We invite you to conceive of Santa Barbara County as one local node in a globalized network of energy production, distribution, and consumption. Understanding a region’s co-constitutive history with oil production provides a foothold in the larger slippery global system of oil extraction, refinement, transportation, and use. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2021-07-14T13:58:11-07:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 19
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.19 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 19 |
title | dcterms:title | How to Explore the Field Guide |
description | dcterms:description | This page describes the multiple routes one might take through the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara is a multimedia narrative map that contains items created by the graduate students of the Fall 2018 Mellon Sawyer Seminar at the University of California, Santa Barbara, over the course of their site-based research on the history of oil in Santa Barbara County. The Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the map on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. Along this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by using the visualization tool, which you can access by hovering over the compass icon at the top left of any page. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by using the search function (click the magnifying glass at the top of any page) to do keyword searches, creating your own path. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and locations are all potential search terms. By offering a map-based tour, various visualization tools, and metadata search routes, Scalar provides the viewer with a range of options for engagement. For your first visit, we would encourage you to follow the path laid out by the map. Imagine yourself as a participant in the guided tour of each site, driving up the 101 and looking out at the ocean, imagining, along with the Reguio team, all of the forms of life that have and continue to move through this place that has been so powerfully shaped by oil. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2021-07-07T15:15:34-07:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 18
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.18 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 18 |
title | dcterms:title | How to Explore the Field Guide |
description | dcterms:description | This page describes the multiple routes one might take through the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara is a multimedia narrative map that contains items created by the graduate students of the Fall 2018 Mellon Sawyer Seminar at the University of California, Santa Barbara, over the course of their site-based research on the history of oil in Santa Barbara County. The Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the map on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. Along this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by using the visualization tool, which you can access by hovering over the compass icon at the top left of any page. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by using the search function (click the magnifying glass at the top of any page) to do keyword searches, creating your own path. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and locations are all potential search terms. By offering a map-based tour, various visualization tools, and metadata search routes, Scalar provides the viewer with a range of options for engagement. For your first visit, we would encourage you to follow the path laid out by the map. Imagine yourself as a participant in the guided tour of each site, driving up the 101 and looking out at the ocean, imagining, along with the Reguio team, all of the forms of life that have and continue to move through this place that has been so powerfully shaped by oil. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2021-07-07T13:39:49-07:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 17
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.17 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 17 |
title | dcterms:title | How to Explore the Field Guide |
description | dcterms:description | This page describes the multiple routes one might take through the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara is a multimedia narrative map that contains items created by the graduate students of the Fall 2018 Mellon Sawyer Seminar at the University of California, Santa Barbara, over the course of their site-based research on the history of oil in Santa Barbara County. The Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the map on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. Along this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by using the visualization tool, which you can access by hovering over the compass icon at the top left of any page. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by using the search function (click the magnifying glass at the top of any page) to do keyword searches, creating your own path. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and locations are all potential search terms. By offering a map-based tour, various visualization tools, and metadata search routes, Scalar provides the viewer with a range of options for engagement. For your first visit, we would encourage you to follow the path laid out by the map. Imagine yourself as a participant in the guided tour of each site, driving up the 101 and looking out at the ocean, imagining, along with the Reguio team, all of the forms of life that have and continue to move through this place that has been so powerfully shaped by oil. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2021-07-07T13:37:58-07:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 16
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.16 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 16 |
title | dcterms:title | How to Explore the Field Guide |
description | dcterms:description | This page describes the multiple routes one might take through the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara is a multimedia narrative map that contains items created by the graduate students of the Fall 2018 Mellon Sawyer Seminar at the University of California, Santa Barbara, over the course of their site-based research on the history of oil in Santa Barbara County. The Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the map on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. Along this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by using the visualization tool, which you can access by hovering over the compass icon at the top left of any page. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by using the search function (click the magnifying glass at the top of any page) to do keyword searches, creating your own path. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and locations are all potential search terms. By offering a map-based tour, various visualization tools, and metadata search routes, Scalar provides the viewer with a range of options for engagement. For your first visit, we would encourage you to follow the path laid out by the map. Imagine yourself as a participant in the guided tour of each site, driving up the 101 and looking out at the ocean, imagining, along with the Reguio team, all of the forms of life that have and continue to move through this place that has been so powerfully shaped by oil. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2021-07-07T13:10:48-07:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 15
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.15 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 15 |
title | dcterms:title | Exploring the Field Guide |
description | dcterms:description | This page describes the multiple routes one might take through the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara is a web archive and map that contains items gathered and created by the graduate students of the Fall 2018 Mellon Sawyer Seminar at UCSB over the course of their site-based research on the history of oil in Santa Barbara County. Due to the number and variety of items, which include images, archival documents, audio files, and textual descriptions, the Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the map on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. Along this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary and archival images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by using the visualization tool, which you can access by hovering over the compass icon at the top left of every page. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by using the search function (click the magnifying glass at the top of any page) to do keyword searches, thus creating your own paths. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and locations are all potential search terms. We hope that by providing many routes through this material, we allow virtual travelers to make unexpected discoveries. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-21T23:55:21-08:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 14
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.14 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 14 |
title | dcterms:title | Exploring the Field Guide |
description | dcterms:description | This page describes the multiple routes one might take through the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara is a web archive and map that contains items gathered and created by the graduate students of the Fall 2018 Mellon Sawyer Seminar at UCSB over the course of their site-based research on the history of oil in Santa Barbara County. Due to the number and variety of items, which include images, archival documents, audio files, and textual descriptions, the Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the map on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. Along this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary and archival images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by using the visualization tool, which you can access by hovering over the compass icon at the top left of every page. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by using the search function (click the magnifying glass at the top of any page) to do keyword searches, thus creating your own paths. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and locations are all potential search terms. We hope that by providing many routes through this material, we allow virtual travelers to make unexpected discoveries. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-21T23:54:52-08:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 13
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.13 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 13 |
title | dcterms:title | Exploring the Field Guide |
description | dcterms:description | This page describes the multiple routes one might take through the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara is a web archive and map that contains items gathered and created by the graduate students of the Fall 2018 Mellon Sawyer Seminar over the course of their site-based research on the history of oil in Santa Barbara County. Due to the number and variety of items, which include images, archival documents, audio files, and textual descriptions, the Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the map on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. Along this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary and archival images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by keyword. These interpretive routes are organized by thematic groupings: memory, scale, labor, and ecology. The keywords forge connections between sites, histories, and media that push against geographical and historical distinctions. One of the most common experiences of oil in Santa Barbara County is the sight of offshore oil platforms on the horizon, but vision is not the only sense through which one encounters oil in this place. As many of the graduate students discovered during their research, one might also experience oil through the senses of sound, smell, touch, and taste. For this reason, we have organized the material gathered here into a sensory archive that can be explored by clicking each of the five senses. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by doing keyword searches yourself, thus creating your own paths. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and locations are all potential search terms. We hope that by providing many routes through this material, we allow virtual travelers to make unexpected discoveries, both along the paths we have created and the ones they unearth. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-21T20:04:33-08:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 12
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.12 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 12 |
title | dcterms:title | Exploring the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara is a web archive and map that contains items gathered and created by the graduate students of the Fall 2018 Mellon Sawyer Seminar over the course of their site-based research on the history of oil in Santa Barbara County. Due to the number and variety of items, which include images, archival documents, audio files, and textual descriptions, the Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the map on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. Along this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary and archival images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by keyword. These interpretive routes are organized by thematic groupings: memory, scale, labor, and ecology. The keywords forge connections between sites, histories, and media that push against geographical and historical distinctions. One of the most common experiences of oil in Santa Barbara County is the sight of offshore oil platforms on the horizon, but vision is not the only sense through which one encounters oil in this place. As many of the graduate students discovered during their research, one might also experience oil through the senses of sound, smell, touch, and taste. For this reason, we have organized the material gathered here into a sensory archive that can be explored by clicking each of the five senses. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by doing keyword searches yourself, thus creating your own paths. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and locations are all potential search terms. We hope that by providing many routes through this material, we allow virtual travelers to make unexpected discoveries, both along the paths we have created and the ones they unearth. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-19T22:33:16-08:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 11
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.11 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 11 |
title | dcterms:title | Exploring the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara contains all the items collected and created by graduate students in the Mellon Sawyer Seminar over the course of their site-based research. Due to the number and variety of items, which include images, archival documents, audio files, and textual descriptions, the Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. On this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary and archival images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by keyword. These interpretive routes are organized by thematic groupings like memory, ecology, and labor. The keywords forge connections between sites, histories, and perspectives that push against geographical and historical boundaries. One of the most common experiences of oil in Santa Barbara County is the sight of offshore oil platforms on the horizon, but vision is not the only sense through which one encounters oil in this place. As many of the graduate students discovered during their research, one might also experience oil through the senses of sound, smell, touch, and taste. For this reason, we have organized the material gathered here into a sensory archive that can be explored via each of the five senses. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by doing keyword searches yourself, thus creating your own paths. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and location are all potential search terms. We hope that by providing many routes through this material, we allow virtual travelers to make unexpected discoveries, both along the paths we have created and the ones they unearth. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-15T22:53:39-08:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 10
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.10 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 10 |
title | dcterms:title | Exploring the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara contains all the items collected and created by graduate students in the Mellon Sawyer Seminar over the course of their site-based research. Due to the number and variety of items, which include images, archival documents, audio files, and textual descriptions, the Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. On this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary and archival images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by keyword. These interpretive routes are organized by thematic groupings like memory, ecology, and labor. The keywords forge connections between sites, histories, and perspectives that push against geographical and historical boundaries. One of the most common experiences of oil in Santa Barbara County is the sight of offshore oil platforms on the horizon, but vision is not the only sense through which one encounters oil in this place. As many of the graduate students discovered during their research, one might also experience oil through the senses of sound, smell, touch, and taste. For this reason, we have organized the material gathered here into a sensory archive that can be explored via each of the five senses. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by doing keyword searches yourself, thus creating your own paths. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and location are all potential search terms. We hope that by providing many routes through this material, we allow virtual travelers to make unexpected discoveries, both along the paths we have created and the ones they discover. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-09T19:15:22-08:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 9
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.9 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 9 |
title | dcterms:title | Exploring the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara contains all the items collected and created by graduate students in the Mellon Sawyer Seminar over the course of their site-based research. Due to the number and variety of items, which include images, archival documents, audio files, and textual descriptions, the Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. On this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary and archival images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by keyword. These interpretive routes are organized by thematic groupings like memory, ecology, and labor. The keywords forge connections between sites, histories, and perspectives that push against geographical and historical boundaries. One of the most common experiences of oil in Santa Barbara County is the sight of offshore oil platforms on the horizon, but vision is not the only sense through which one encounters oil in this place. As many of the graduate students discovered during their research, one might also experience oil through the senses of sound, smell, touch, and taste. For this reason, we have organized the material gathered here into a sensory archive that can be explored via each of the five senses. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by doing keyword searches yourself, thus creating your own paths. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and location are all potential search terms. We hope that by providing many routes through this material, we allow virtual travelers to make unexpected discoveries, both along the paths we have created and the ones they discover. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-09T19:15:03-08:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 8
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.8 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 8 |
title | dcterms:title | Exploring the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara contains all the items collected and created by graduate students in the Mellon Sawyer Seminar over the course of their site-based research. Due to the number and variety of items, which include images, archival documents, audio files, and textual descriptions, the Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. On this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary and archival images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by keyword. These interpretive routes are organized by thematic groupings like memory, ecology, and labor. The keywords forge connections between sites, histories, and perspectives that push against geographical and historical boundaries. One of the most common experiences of oil in Santa Barbara County is the sight of offshore oil platforms on the horizon, but vision is not the only sense through which one encounters oil in this place. As many of the graduate students discovered during their research, one might also experience oil through the senses of sound, smell, touch, and taste. For this reason, we have organized the material gathered here into a sensory archive that can be explored via each of the five senses. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by doing keyword searches yourself, thus creating your own paths. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and location are all potential search terms. We hope that by providing many routes through this material, we allow virtual travelers to make unexpected discoveries, both along the paths we have created and the ones they discover. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-09T19:13:37-08:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 7
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.7 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 7 |
title | dcterms:title | Exploring the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara contains all the items collected and created by graduate students in the Mellon Sawyer Seminar over the course of their site-based research. Due to the number and variety of items, which include images, archival documents, audio files, and textual descriptions, the Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. On this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary and archival images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by keyword. These interpretive routes are organized by thematic groupings like memory, ecology, and labor. The keywords forge connections between sites, histories, and perspectives that push against geographical and historical boundaries. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by doing keyword searches yourself, thus creating your own paths. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and location are all potential search terms. We hope that by providing many routes through this material, we allow virtual travelers to make unexpected discoveries, both along the paths we have created and the ones they discover. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-09T18:58:51-08:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 6
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.6 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 6 |
title | dcterms:title | Exploring the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara contains all the items collected and created by graduate students in the Mellon Sawyer Seminar over the course of their site-based research. Due to the number and variety of items, which include images, archival documents, audio files, and textual descriptions, the Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. On this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary and archival images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by keyword. These interpretive routes are organized by thematic groupings like memory, ecology, and labor. The keywords forge connections between sites, histories, and perspectives that push against geographical and historical boundaries. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by doing keyword searches yourself, thus creating your own paths. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and location are all potential search terms. We hope that by providing many routes through this material, we allow virtual travelers to make unexpected discoveries, both along the paths we have created and the ones they discover. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-09T18:57:25-08:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 5
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.5 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 5 |
title | dcterms:title | Exploring the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara contains all the items collected and created by graduate students in the Mellon Sawyer Seminar over the course of their site-based research. Due to the number and variety of items, which include images, archival documents, audio files, and textual descriptions, the Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. On this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary and archival images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by keyword. These interpretive routes are organized by thematic groupings like memory, ecology, and labor. The keywords forge connections between sites, histories, and perspectives that push against geographical and historical boundaries. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by doing keyword searches yourself, thus creating your own paths. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and location are all potential search terms. We hope that by providing many routes through this material, we allow virtual travelers to make unexpected discoveries, both along the paths we have created and the ones they discover. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-09T18:56:35-08:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 4
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.4 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 4 |
title | dcterms:title | Exploring the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara contains all the items collected and created by graduate students in the Mellon Sawyer Seminar over the course of their site-based research. Due to the number and variety of items, which include images, archival documents, audio files, and textual descriptions, the Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes.
|
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-09T18:55:31-08:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 3
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.3 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 3 |
title | dcterms:title | Exploring the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara contains all the items collected and created by graduate students in the Mellon Sawyer Seminar over the course of their site-based research. Due to the number and variety of items, which include images, archival documents, audio files, and textual descriptions, the Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. On this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary and archival images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by keyword. These interpretive routes are organized by thematic groupings like memory, ecology, and labor. The keywords forge connections between sites, histories, and perspectives that push against geographical and historical boundaries. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by doing keyword searches yourself, thus creating your own paths. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and location are all potential search terms. We hope that by providing many routes through this material, we allow virtual travelers to make unexpected discoveries, both along the paths we have created and the ones they discover. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-09T18:53:37-08:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 2
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.2 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 2 |
title | dcterms:title | Exploring the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | A Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara contains all the items collected and created by graduate students in the Mellon Sawyer Seminar over the course of their site-based research. Due to the number and variety of items, which include images, archival documents, audio files, and textual descriptions, the Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. On this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary and archival images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by keyword. These interpretive routes are organized by thematic groupings like memory, ecology, and labor. The keywords forge connections between sites, histories, and perspectives that push against geographical and historical boundaries. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by doing keyword searches yourself, thus creating your own paths. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and location are all potential search terms. We hope that by providing many routes through this material, we allow virtual travelers to make unexpected discoveries, both along the paths we have created and the ones they discover. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-09T18:51:29-08:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
Version 1
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/exploring--the-field-guide.1 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 1 |
title | dcterms:title | Exploring the Field Guide |
content | sioc:content | The Field Guide to Oil in Santa Barbara contains all the items collected and created by graduate students in the Mellon Sawyer Seminar over the course of their site-based research. Due to the number and variety of items, which include images, archival documents, audio files, and textual descriptions, the Field Guide is designed to be explored through a number of routes. One way to browse the material collected here is to follow the path laid out on the main page, which will take the virtual traveler from the Carpinteria Tar Pits up the 101 to Refugio State Beach, with stops along the way at Summerland, the Santa Barbara Harbor, and Coal Oil Point. On this path, you will find observational and historical descriptions and contemporary and archival images of each site. Another way to navigate this material is by keyword. These interpretive routes are organized by thematic groupings like memory, ecology, and labor. The keywords forge connections between sites, histories, and perspectives that push against geographical and historical boundaries. Yet another way to venture through the Field Guide is by doing keyword searches yourself, thus creating your own paths. The search function accesses the metadata for each item. Titles, dates of publication, and location are all potential search terms. We hope that by providing many routes through this material, we allow virtual travelers to make unexpected discoveries, both along the paths we have created and the ones they discover. |
default view | scalar:defaultView | plain |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/a-field-guide-to-oil-in-santa-barbara/users/29022 |
created | dcterms:created | 2019-01-09T18:51:09-08:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |