Chet Van Duzer is a David Rumsey Research Fellow at the John Carter Brown Library and a board member of the Lazarus Project at the University of Rochester, which brings multispectral imaging to cultural institutions around the world. He has also held research fellowships at the Library of Congress, the Huntington Library, the Clements Library, and Princeton University Library. He has published extensively on medieval and Renaissance maps in journals such as
Imago Mundi
,
Terrae Incognitae
,
Word & Image
, and
Viator
. He is the author of
Johann Schöner s Globe of 1515: Transcription and Study
, the first detailed analysis of one of the earliest surviving terrestrial globes that includes the New World; and (with John Hessler)
Seeing the World Anew: The Radical Vision of Martin Waldseemüller s 1507 & 1516 World Maps
. His book
Sea Monsters on Medieval and Renaissance Maps
was published in 2013 by the British Library, and is now available in German and Russian editions, with a Chinese edition on the way. In 2014 the Library of Congress published a study of Christopher Columbus s
Book of Privileges
which he co-authored with John Hessler and Daniel De Simone. His book
The World for a King: Pierre Desceliers Map of 1550
was published at the end of 2015 by the British Library, and in 2016 Brill published a book he co-authored with Ilya Dines,
Apocalyptic Cartography: Thematic Maps and the End of the World in a Fifteenth-Century Manuscript
. His current NEH project is a study of the annotations in a heavily annotated copy of the 1525 edition of Ptolemy s
Geography
.