 |
|
Timeline 1990-2004
Protection, preservation, and interpretation continue to be the goals of
public archeology, while new strategies and techniques to preserve the archeological
record are initiated. Public outreach and participation, partnerships, and
preservation programs are top priorities. The Native American Graves Protection
and Repatriation Act influences participation of Native Americans in archeological
projects, while amendments to the Archaeological Resources Protection Act
(ARPA) require federal agencies to conduct public outreach and education
about archeology. Also under ARPA, programs to fight looting and preserve
the archaeological record expand, more law enforcement personnel are trained
in archeological protection, and the law is used more often to prosecute
more looters. The use and sharing of archeological research results is improved
through interagency cooperation in project development and information exchange
at the national, state, and local levels. In addition, the systematic preservation
of artifacts and related records from archeological sites results in better
conservation and use of collections and records to enhance the understanding
of the past.
Timeline 1990-2004
-
1990
-
Archeological collections sometimes are stored in inappropriate
facilities and may suffer further from compression damage, water
damage, and pest infestation.
US Army Corps of Engineers, St. Louis District
The regulations, Curation of Federally-Owned
and Administered Archeological Collections (36 CFR 79) are published
in final form. They establish definitions, standards, procedures,
and guidelines that federal agencies must observe to manage and
preserve archeological collections and associated records from federal
projects.
-
Congress enacts the Native
American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA). It
provide definitions procedures
for the disposition or repatriation of culturally affiliated Native
American, Native Hawaiian, and Native Alaskan human remains, funerary
objects, sacred objects, and objects of cultural patrimony that
were inadvertently discovered or intentionally excavated from tribal
or federal lands after 1990, or are held by federal agencies or
museums that receive federal funds.
-
The National Park Service (NPS) releases the Abandoned
Shipwreck Act (ASA) Guidelines to provide advice to both state
and federal agencies on effective management of abandoned shipwrecks
under their care.
-
1991
-
Teaching with Historic Places in a Virginia classroom.
NPS Photo
Secretary of the Interior Manuel Lujan issues the National
Strategy for Federal Archeology. The strategy is designed as
an integrative mechanism to maintain standards and keep efforts
focused on preserving sites in situ, conserving collections
and records, using and sharing research results, and promoting public
education and outreach.
-
The NPS National Register of Historic Places initiates the Teaching
with Historic Places program to promote places as effective
tools for enlivening traditional classroom instruction.
-
The African Burial Ground, a 17th century cemetery, is discovered
20 feet beneath ground surface in the densely developed southern
tip of Manhattan, New York City. During the next several years of
excavation, over 400 burials of enslaved Africans and African Americans
are recovered and studied to learn about when the cemetery was used
and the historical and cultural backgrounds of the people buried
there.
-
Passport in Time logo.
The US Forest Service establishes
Passport
in Time (PIT) as a national program. PIT volunteers work with
professional archeologists and historians on projects such as excavation,
survey, historic structure restoration, and the analysis and curation
of artifacts.
-
1992
-
The National
Historical Preservation Act is amended to include the stipulation
that the Secretary of the Interior must consult with Indian tribes
and Native Hawaiian organizations. It also provides for the establishment
of tribal preservation programs and creates a presidential appointment
to the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation for a Native American
or Native Hawaiian.
-
The National Park Service launches the National
Archeological Database, Reports module. It is an expanded bibliographic
inventory of reports on archeological investigation and planning,
mostly of limited circulation ("gray literature"). NADB-Reports
can be searched by state, county, cultural affiliation, keyword,
year of publication, title, and author. In 2004, it holds over 350,000
records.
-
1993
-
ArchNet is the first website
to provide access to extensive archeological resources on the Internet.
It serves as the Virtual Library for Archaeology.
-
Salinas Pueblo Missions in New Mexico is an example of one
of the sites Vanishing Treasures is working to preserve.
NPS Photo
Vanishing Treasures, a grassroots effort
by NPS park superintendents to preserve prehistoric and historic
ruins in the arid west, is launched. The key goals are to address
the stabilization of structures in imminent danger of loss, train
a new generation of craftsmen before the older ones retire, and
evaluate, rank, and accomplish preservation strategies on Vanishing
Treasures resources.
-
1994
-
In response to a growing concern that its archaeological collections
were not being properly curated or managed, the US Army Corps of
Engineers creates the Mandatory
Center of Expertise for the Curation and Management of Archaeological
Collections (MCX-CMAC). MCX-CMAC is charged with assisting the
Corps and other federal, state, and local agencies in activities
such as NAGPRA-compliance activities, archives, archaeological collections
management, and the design of museum collection facilities.
-
Excavations of an aircraft crash site in Vietnam.
NPS Photo
Interagency cooperation begins as archeologists from the NPS Midwest
Archeological Center work with the US Department of Defense
to investigate aircraft crash sites from the Vietnam
War in an attempt to resolve the fate of aircrews who were lost
with these planes in Vietnam and Laos. Using eyewitness accounts
from local residents, US military personnel and Vietnamese laborers
identify and excavate crash sites scattered across a series of rice
paddies.
-
1995
-
The American
Cultural Resources Association (ACRA) is incorporated to promote
the professional, ethical, and business practices of the cultural
resources industry for the benefit of the resources, the public,
and the members of the association.
-
1996
-
The human skeletal remains that have come to be referred to as "Kennewick
Man", or the "Ancient One", are found in Kennewick,
Washington. Almost immediately controversy develops regarding who
is responsible for determining the fate of the remains. Indian tribes,
local officials, and some members of the scientific community make
claims. Subsequently, the federal government conducts extensive
research on Kennewick Man as part of the effort to resolve the legal
case that develops from the initial controversy.
-
1997
-
Wyoming archaeology month poster.
NPS Photo
Since the organization of the first state archeology week in Arizona
in 1983, the celebration of Archeology
Week has grown considerably. Thirty-nine states now celebrate
an archeology week or month. Archeology celebrations enhance the
public's understanding of archeology and the need for the preservation
of the archeological record.
-
In a landmark ARPA decision on the Shumway case, the US Court of
Appeals for the Tenth Circuit rules that the sentencing judge may
use “archeological value” to calculate loss when sentencing
looters. The value
is based on what it would cost to retrieve scientific information
from the site had it not been violated, plus the costs of site stabilization
and artifact curation. The ruling stems from the appeal of a man
who received the largest sentence ever handed down in an ARPA case.
-
1998
-
Archeologists succeed in publishing an archeological excavation
report, complete with extensive data and graphics, on a CD. This
is Excavating
Occaneechi Town: Archaeology Of An Eighteenth-Century Indian Village
In North Carolina edited by R. P. Stephen Davis, Jr., Patrick
Livingood, H. Trawick Ward, and Vincas Steponaitis. The authors'
more recent website also includes an Electronic Dig.
-
The Register
of Professional Archaeologists (RPA) is formed to establish
universal standards in archeology. RPA is a listing of archeologists
who have agreed to abide by an explicit code of conduct and standards
of research performance based on the code of ethics, standards of
performance, and grievance procedures of the former Society of Professional
Archeologists.
-
1999
-
Archeological collections sometimes are stored in inappropriate
facilities and may suffer further from compression damage, water
damage, and pest infestation.
US Army Corps of Engineers, St. Louis District
National NAGPRA becomes
a program of the NPS. The program maintains several online databases
designed to provide access to information on a variety of NAGPRA-related
topics: the Native American Consultation Database (NACD), the Notices
of Inventories Completion Database and the Notices of Intent to
Repatriate Database.
-
The US Attorney for the District of Utah reaches a creative settlement
in U.S. v. Dose, which involved ARPA violations committed by a teacher
leading a middle school archeology club trip and the school district.
The teacher is required to share the lessons he learned in speaking
engagements and in articles for education journals and the Society
for American Archaeology's "Archaeology & Public Education"
newsletter. He must also pay for the repair of the archeological
site involved, while the middle school district pays the ARPA civil
penalty.
-
2000
-
Thunder Bay's shipwrecks create artificial reef habitat and
attract marine life, creating popular spots for divers to explore
natural and cultural resources.
Glen Allen, Channel Islands Marine Sanctuary
A coalition of archeological organizations commissioned Harris Interactive
to conduct a study of the American public to understand their perceptions,
knowledge, and attitudes about archeology. "Exploring
Public Perceptions and Attitudes about Archaeology" is released
and reveals that people think archeology is important to today's
society.
-
Thunder
Bay National Marine Sanctuary and Underwater Preserve is designated
as the 13th national marine sanctuary and the first in the Great
Lakes. Approximately 160 shipwrecks that span more than a century
of maritime history lie within the region.
-
The NPS launches its first self-motivated, distance learning course
for archeologists worldwide, Managing
Archeological Collections. It focuses on the issues and activities
involved in preserving and managing archeological collections from
the field to the museum and over the long term. It has ten sections,
each with a bibliography, related links, and a quiz.
-
Children completing Project Archaeology activities.
Project
Archaeology, a national heritage education program, is founded
by the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM) for educators and their students. Its goals
are to teach young Americans to value and protect our cultural heritage,
strengthen children's sense of personal responsibility for stewardship,
and use the vast historic and archaeological resources under the
custody of the BLM to support the education of America's children.
-
2001
-
An interdisciplinary workgroup of NPS archeologists and interpreters
develop a curriculum to train both sets of professionals in the
skills and abilities needed to effectively interpret archeological
resources to the public. This is the first shared competency in
the NPS.
-
The UNESCO
Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage
is adopted as a follow-up to the 1996 ICOMOS Charter on the Protection
and Management of Underwater Cultural Heritage. Developed by government
experts from over 107 nations, the convention is the product of
many years of negotiations and contains professional rules on underwater
archeology.
-
Top view of Mound A excavations at Shiloh National Military
Park.
NPS Photo
Although Shiloh National Military
Park was established to commemorate a Civil War battle, it was
also occupied by Mississippian peoples (from circa AD 1000 - 1350).
The NPS Southeast
Archeological Center's (SEAC) Shiloh
Mound Archeological Testing Project begins working on the Shiloh
Mound Complex. It includes a number of mounds around a plaza and
an encircling palisade situated on a high bluff that is rapidly
eroding into the Tennessee River.
-
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration issues final
Guidelines
for Research, Exploration and Salvage of RMS TITANIC. The guidelines
are developed in consultation with the United Kingdom, France, and
Canada.
-
2002
-
2003
-
Preserve America logo.
The "Preserve
America" Executive Order 13287 is issued. It advances the
protection, enhancement, and contemporary use of historic properties
owned by the federal Government, and promotes intergovernmental
cooperation and partnerships for the preservation and use of historic
properties.
-
2004
-
Interpretation for Archeologists:
A Guide to Increasing Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities is
launched. America's archeological resources embody a rich heritage
of human experiences and cultural identities. They tell us about
people from the past and establish important connections to the
present. Interpretation guides the public to realizing the personal
relevance of archeological resources and the importance of their
preservation and protection.
-
Your thoughts on the significant events in public archeology are
always appreciated. Please send your suggestions to Terry
Childs.
1990-2004
return to top | links | bibliography
|
|
 |
-
1784-1905
-
1906-1929
-
1930-1944
-
1945-1969
-
1970-1989
-
-
Credits
|
 |