Laura Moll Orfila

Doctoranda

She graduated in Art History at the University of Girona (UdG) within the heritage-diachronic itinerary (2019-2023). During this period she has participated in the archaeological interventions of the Roman Villa of Pla de l'Horta (Sarrià de Ter) and the necropolis of the Sants Metges (Sant Julià de Ramis). She has also carried out extracurricular internships at the Cathedral of Girona, where she has worked as a heritage technician in carrying out inventory and documentation work in the warehouses of the Cathedral Museum. She dedicated her final degree project to Pompeian painting under the title The iconographic program and c of the House of the Vettii , Pompeia (2023) .

After completing the degree, he completed the Master's degree in Humanities Research, with a focus on Archaeology, at the University of Girona (2023-2024). The master's internships were carried out at the Archaeology and Prehistory Laboratory of the University of Girona. The master's final project consisted of the archaeological and artistic review of the Paleochristian basilica of es Fornàs de Torelló (Maó, Menorca) entitled La basílica d'es Fornàs de Torelló (Menorca). Review and new interpretations of the Paleochristian site from an archaeological and artistic point of view . This work was presented at the VIII Predoctoral Conference of the University of Girona and at the XV JIA ( Young Researchers in Archaeology ).

As an archaeological heritage professional, he has worked at the Basilica des Cap des Port de Fornells in Menorca (2024), at the Roman Villa of Collet (Sant Antoni de Calonge) (2024) and at the Roman Villa of Pla de l'Horta (2025). He has also worked in the field of heritage dissemination with the Menorca Talayotic Agency.

He has currently started a doctoral thesis on Accessibility to the archaeological heritage of Catalonia based on virtual models: assets, equipment and social uses within the doctoral program in Human Sciences, Heritage and Culture of the University of Girona within the framework of an IFUdG scholarship funded by ICRPC. Among other aspects, this work will analyze how accessibility to archaeological heritage has evolved thanks to virtual models popularized in recent decades and to what extent this has led to an improvement in the knowledge and use of heritage by citizens.

ORCID: https://orcid.org/0009-0009-7483-2620