Professor Daniel Pett
Dan has worked in museums for 2 decades and has held the roles of Digital Humanities Lead at the British Museum, where he designed and implemented digital innovation connecting humanities research, museum practice, and the creative industries; ICT Advisor to the Portable Antiquities Scheme and Head of Digital and IT for the Fitzwilliam Museum. In doing so, he has created extensive cross-disciplinary and cross-sector networks. He is an advocate of open access, open source and reproducible research.
Dan’s first major project at the British Museum was to design and build the award winning Portable Antiquities Scheme database (which holds records of over 1.6 million objects) and enabled collaboration through projects working on linked and open data (LOD) with ISAWNYU and the American Numismatic Society, crowdsourcing and crowdfunding (MicroPasts), and developing the British Museum’s 3D capture reputation. He led the British Museum's 3D work with Thomas Flynn and Jennifer Wexler and whilst at the Fitzwilliam Museum he revived their faded digital reputation and led the development of their new website, collections systems, 3d capture, CRM and ticketing and IT infrastructure.
Daniel is Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, London and the Royal Geographical Society. He holds Honorary posts at Stirling University, UCL's Institute of Archaeology and the Centre for Digital Humanities and publishes regularly in the fields of museum studies, archaeology and digital humanities and writes too much code.