Acknowledgments
The editors offer their most sincere thanks to Peter Der Manuelian, for his kind invitation to include the present volume in the Harvard Egyptological Studies series. In addition, we are very grateful to the publisher and staff at Brill, in the Netherlands and the United States, for their continuous support and guidance throughout the process. We would also like to thank the anonymous peer reviewers who kindly took time to offer their insightful comments and critiques on a quite diverse range of topics that, despite their common thread of incorporating new and emerging technologies in Egyptological research, nevertheless cover quite a broad range of subject matter. We are also very grateful to the many authors and contributors for their patience, collegiality, and diligence. In addition, we offer our thanks to Paige Nehls (M.A. candidate in Egyptian Art & Archaeology, University of Memphis) and Amalee Bowen (M.A. candidate in Egyptology, Indiana University Bloomington) for their assistance with copy editing select chapters during the busy Spring semester of 2022. Finally, it is important to note that one of the editors’ chief goals, since the project’s inception, was to ensure that this volume would be made available in both traditional print format and as a freely available, Open Access digital edition—a goal which has only become more relevant in the wake of the global COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting interruptions of services and access to in-person resources. Funding for Open Access to the present volume was made possible through generous grants from the Michela Schiff Giorgini Foundation, the University of Memphis Institute of Egyptian Art & Archaeology, and the University of Indiana, Bloomington, for which the editors wish to express their profound gratitude and appreciation.