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The National Park Service offers many resources to ensure compliance with the laws, regulations and policies discussed in this section. Director's Order 28A: Archeology The NPS Archeology Program publishes the NPS Archeology Guide to describe operational requirements, activities, standards, and other guidance to ensure the responsible management of archeological resources under the stewardship of the National Park Service. The Guide supplements more general directions in Director's Order #28A: Archeology, the NPS CRM Guideline, and Directors' Order 28: Cultural Resource Management. The NPS Archeology Program publishes Technical Briefs that address topics of interest to archeologists, land managers, preservation officers, museum professionals, Native Americans, law enforcement agents, educators, and the public. Technical Briefs cover topics ranging from conservation to public education.
Common Ground: Archeology and Ethnography in the Public Interest (known previously as Federal Archeology) was a quarterly magazine read by nearly 16,000 archeologists, land managers, preservation officers, museum professionals, Native Americans, law enforcement agents, educators, and the public. Published from 1994 to 2001, each issue offered in-depth coverage of a topic-such as working with Native Americans, managing sites in wilderness lands, or African American archeology-as well as hard-to-find or otherwise unavailable information on protecting sites, public outreach, caring for collections, training, publications, and more. In 2003, this publication was replaced by Common Ground: Preserving our Nation's Heritage to cover a wider range of cultural resource issues.
CRM-Culural Resource Management
From 1978 to 2002, the National Park Service published CRM-Cultural Resource Management, a magazine containing information for parks, federal agencies, Indian tribes, states, local governments, and the private sector that promotes and maintains high standards for preserving and managing cultural resources. This publication includes articles, references, and bulletins. In 2003, CRM was replaced by CRM: The Journal of Heritage Stewardship.
The National Register of Historic Places is the Nation's official list of cultural resources worthy of preservation. It is part of a national program to coordinate and support public and private efforts to identify, evaluate, and protect our historic and archeological resources. The National Register Bulletin Series provides guidance to document, evaluate and nominate historically significant sites to the National Register of Historic Places. The series is divided into four sections: the Basics, Property Types, Technical Assistance, and General Guidance. Also available are several brochures that provide information on the programs of the National Register.
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