Does anyone know the current location / contact info for Mark Lake, an archaeologist formerly (?) from London ? He is the author of a couple of modules that were listed from our web pages, but the links no longer work. There doesn't seem to be any mention of him on that institution's web pages any more.
Thanks,
----
Scott Mitchell, Assistant Professor, Carleton University
Department of Geography & Environmental Studies, Loeb A209
Mailing: Loeb B349, 1125 Colonel By Dr., Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6 Canada
1-613-520-2600 x2695 Fax: 613-520-4301 Scott_Mitchell@carleton.ca
Hello Scott
On Mon, 8 Dec 2003, Scott Mitchell wrote:
Does anyone know the current location / contact info for Mark Lake, an
archaeologist formerly (?) from London ? He is the author of a couple
of modules that were listed from our web pages, but the links no longer
work. There doesn't seem to be any mention of him on that
institution's web pages any more.
What links are you talking about? The pages for r.cva etc. are still there
and just looking now there seems to be a new one: r.in.ntf2? I don't
remember that before.
See http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~tcrnmar/ and click on GIS in the left-hand
frame.
I also found a paper just published last September by Mark Lake that
mentions GIS a lot and still gives his address as UCL in London:
http://www.envplan.com/epb/abstracts/b30/b29122.html
Paul
Ack ! The site must just have been down temporarily when the "broken links" reported to the web list, and still down when I checked it out. I made assumptions, and must not have done a good job of looking him up. A good lesson, thanks.
By the way, I'll test your modifications to the OS X builds shortly...
On Dec 8, 2003, at 9:04, Paul Kelly wrote:
Hello Scott
On Mon, 8 Dec 2003, Scott Mitchell wrote:
Does anyone know the current location / contact info for Mark Lake, an
archaeologist formerly (?) from London ? He is the author of a couple
of modules that were listed from our web pages, but the links no longer
work. There doesn't seem to be any mention of him on that
institution's web pages any more.
What links are you talking about? The pages for r.cva etc. are still there
and just looking now there seems to be a new one: r.in.ntf2? I don't
remember that before.
See http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~tcrnmar/ and click on GIS in the left-hand
frame.
I also found a paper just published last September by Mark Lake that
mentions GIS a lot and still gives his address as UCL in London:
http://www.envplan.com/epb/abstracts/b30/b29122.html
Paul
----
Scott Mitchell, Assistant Professor, Carleton University
Department of Geography & Environmental Studies, Loeb A209
Mailing: Loeb B349, 1125 Colonel By Dr., Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6 Canada
1-613-520-2600 x2695 Fax: 613-520-4301 Scott_Mitchell@carleton.ca