Thanks for your patience during our recent outage at scalar.usc.edu. While Scalar content is loading normally now, saving is still slow, and Scalar's 'additional metadata' features have been disabled, which may interfere with features like timelines and maps that depend on metadata. This also means that saving a page or media item will remove its additional metadata. If this occurs, you can use the 'All versions' link at the bottom of the page to restore the earlier version. We are continuing to troubleshoot, and will provide further updates as needed. Note that this only affects Scalar projects at scalar.usc.edu, and not those hosted elsewhere.
12019-05-01T13:57:55-07:00Emilia Porubcin63ec028064958b3240cc8e4e010f355faa0c8e12332305structured_gallery2019-05-15T03:47:53-07:00Emilia Porubcin63ec028064958b3240cc8e4e010f355faa0c8e12ThemesCharles van Siclen was an Egyptologist who worked on Stanford's Egyptian collections at the Cantor Center for Visual Arts, formerly the University Museum, during the 1970s. He reviewed the university's Egyptian collection, identifying many items that had lost crucial information as a result of the 1906 earthquake.
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12019-04-16T19:29:36-07:00Emilia Porubcin63ec028064958b3240cc8e4e010f355faa0c8e12PeopleChristina J. Hodge15plain8608272019-06-14T22:03:40-07:00Christina J. Hodgeb0448a0ebf7b6fff7b74ba40ef2cdd594c9bfcf9