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Cultural Resource Management: Archaeological Research, Preservation Planning, and Public Education in the Northeastern United States

Autor Jordan Kerber
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 ian 1994 – vârsta până la 17 ani
Cultural resource management (CRM) involves research, legislation, and education related to the conservation, protection, and interpretation of historic and prehistoric archaeological resources. Kerber's work is divided into four major categories of discussion: theoretical and interpretive frameworks, research methodology, legislation and compliance, and creative protection strategies. The only volume on CRM in Northeastern America since Spiess's Conservation Archaeology in 1978, its contributors are all major participants in archaeology in the Northeast, which includes the six New England states and New York. Because the volume presents successful models and practical advice concerning CRM, it is relevant to regions other than the Northeast and can be helpful in providing a comparative framework for evaluating programs elsewhere in the United States.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780897893695
ISBN-10: 0897893697
Pagini: 312
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Notă biografică

JORDAN E. KERBER is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Colgate University in Hamilton, New York, where he is also Director of the Native American Studies Program. He is the author of Coastal and Maritime Archaeology (1991).

Cuprins

IllustrationsTablesForewordPrefaceIntroduction by Jordan E. KerberTheoretical And Interpretive FrameworksPrehistoric Human Ecology as Cultural Resource Management by George P. NicholasProcessualism, Postprocessualism, and Cultural Resource Management in New England by Robert G. GoodbyPostprocessual Approaches and Public Archaeology: Putting Critical Archaeology to Work for The Public by Parker B. Potter, Jr.Archaeology, History, and Native Americans: Preserving the Richness of the Past by Paul A. RobinsonResearch MethodologyDiscovering and Estimating the Frequencies and Distribution of Archaeological Sites in the Northeast by Francis P. McManamonImproved Documentation in Shell Midden Excavations: An Example from the South Shore of Cape Cod by Leslie C. ShawLegislation and ComplianceConnecticut's Preservation Mechanisms for Protection of Native American and Colonial Burial Grounds by David A. Poirier and Nicholas F. BellantoniCRM Archaeology and Hydroelectric Relicensing in Maine by Arthur E. SpiessCreative Protection StrategiesThe Carrot, Not the Stick: Strategies for Protecting Archaeological Sites on Private Property by Brona G. SimonCultural Resource Management at the Community Level: The Wayland Archaeology Group by Duncan Ritchie and Paul GardescuArchaeology Under the Gun: Data Recovery, Salvage, and the Conservation Ethic by Curtiss R. HoffmanThe Rogers Island Archaeological Site: Transforming Myths into Strategies for Interpreting and Managing a Major Encampment from the French and Indian War by David R. StarbuckArchaeological Research, Public Education, and Cultural Resource Management in the Northeast: An Integrative Approach by Jordan E. KerberIndex