19 research outputs found
A Case Study of Enterprise Historic Resources Information Management In Large Transportation Agencies, MTI Report 09-06
Historic resources are in some way managed by every transportation agency in the nation. Transportation agencies manage historic and prehistoric archaeological sites, buildings, structures, objects, routes, landscapes, and districts to prevent damage to such resources and to mitigate damage when it is unavoidable. In order to track known resources, transportation agencies often keep local files in a variety of forms, rely upon external sources of information (e.g., historic preservation agencies at the state level), and depend upon staff expertise gained by years of local work. Starting in 1997, Caltrans started a series of surveys of rural rights of way in its district offices. This work, which is still on-going, created fairly similar sets of digital data within approximately half of the agency´s district offices. The GIS datasets and relational database management systems are roughly similar between offices, but not identical. The present study focuses on defining how the district office information systems for historic resources can (and cannot) be used to create an enterprise information management model specific to historic resources within Caltrans. Results of this study range from findings specific to Caltrans and its district offices to general findings that should apply to any transportation agency contemplating an enterprise-wide system for managing cultural resources
A Study of Regionalism in American Archaeology
This paper examines the origins of regionalism in American archaeology, concentrating on both its intellectual and practical contexts. This study attempts to show the effects of regionalism by examining archaeological research that has gone on in one "region": the "Fremont” area" of Utah. This region was selected because many of the problems may be seen with clarity. The conclusions about the effects of regionalism reached here are then: applicable other regions as well. Within the last decade, a few authors have developed historical syntheses of American archaeology. These authors have traced the development of American archaeology by examining the concepts used, at different times, to explain observations made upon the archaeological record. Their belief is that through study of the genesis of the current conceptual base of American archaeology it could be more critically understood
Thermally Modified Rock: The Experimental Study of “Fire-Cracked” Byproducts of Hot Rock Cooking
The archaeology of Hidden Cave, Nevada. Anthropological papers of the AMNH ; v. 61, pt. 1
430 p. : ill., maps ; 26 cm.Bibliography: p. 410-430