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You think it can't happen to you, but it can. One day, months into
your construction project, your front end load operator runs into
bones and wooden slats. Your county coroner says it is not a crime
scene, and refers you to the local archaeology department. The
archaeologist tells you that it is a very important discovery. Work
stops. Archaeological discoveries happen all the time in the course
of projects. Most are manageable, some are less so, and some are
mismanaged, wasting time and money. If you are not prepared, the
consequences can be disastrous. This book is for project engineers,
project managers, construction managers, the staff of affected
government agencies, and archaeological consultants. In its pages
you receive enough information, enough archaeological perspective,
to intelligently work with the various parties involved in your
project and avoid an archaeological disaster.
The entrance of Native Americans into the world of cultural
resource management is forcing a change in the traditional
paradigms that have guided archaeologists, anthropologists, and
other CRM professionals. This book examines these developments from
tribal perspectives and articulates native views on the
identification of cultural resource, how they should be handled and
by whom, and what their meaning is in contemporary life. Stapp and
Burney also demonstrate the connections between cultural resource
and other issues such as native sovereignty, economic development,
human rights, and cultural integrity.
You think it can't happen to you, but it can. One day, months into
your construction project, your front end load operator runs into
bones and wooden slats. Your county coroner says it is not a crime
scene, and refers you to the local archaeology department. The
archaeologist tells you that it is a very important discovery. Work
stops. Archaeological discoveries happen all the time in the course
of projects. Most are manageable, some are less so, and some are
mismanaged, wasting time and money. If you are not prepared, the
consequences can be disastrous. This book is for project engineers,
project managers, construction managers, the staff of affected
government agencies, and archaeological consultants. In its pages
you receive enough information, enough archaeological perspective,
to intelligently work with the various parties involved in your
project and avoid an archaeological disaster.
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