My primary web site ArchaeoPlanet.Org has papers and reports from my 30 years of research and fieldwork. If you go there you will be able to read well illustrated published and unpublished papers and reports about my projects at the World Heritage Sites of Chichen Itza and Uxmal in Yucatán, on the archaeology of Mesoamerica, and about the lives and work of the 19th century Maya archaeologists and photographers Augustus and Alice Dixon Le Plongeon.
Ground penetrating radar–
At the Maya cities of Chichen Itza and Dzibilchaltun, the Cave at Balankanche, and the Pyramid of Kinich Kak Moo at Izamal our research team used ground penetrating radar to locate buildings and roads long ago constructed over by the Maya, to detect objects the Maya buried within their pyramids, and locate caverns that might have been used by the ancient Maya for religious purposes.
Close-range photogrammetry–
The research team used close-range photogrammetry at the ancient Maya city of Uxmal to record in 3D stereo the endangered World Heritage Pyramid of the Magician, and at Labna we recorded also in 3D stereo the unique and intricately built entrance Arch. Over 1000 photos were taken, and those photos along with precision survey data have resulted in precise records that can be used to generate architectural drawings for structural engineering studies and conservation projects.
Augustus and Alice Dixon Le Plongeon and the history of archaeology–
In addition to archaeological project papers there are also papers about the lives, photography, and archaeological work of Augustus and Alice Dixon Le Plongeon, a catalog of five museum collections of their more than 1000 19th century photographs taken of the ancient Maya ruins in 3-D stereo, and a text version of my now out-of-print book, A Dream of Maya, that focuses on the life and archaeology of Augustus Le Plongeon.