Collected sites are commonly seen as places requiring expert intervention to ‘save the past’ from destruction by artifact collectors and looters. Despite engaging directly with the physical effects of collecting and vandalism, little attention is given to the meanings of these actions and the contributions they make to the stories told about sites or the past more broadly. Professional archaeologists often position their engagement with site destruction as heritage ‘salvage’ and regard collecting as lacking any value in contemporary society. Repositioning collecting as meaningful social practice and heritage action raises the question: in failing to understand legal or illegal collecting as significant to heritage, have archaeologists contr...
The world's archaeological heritage is under serious threat from illegal and destructive excavations...
Can You Dig It? is a little archaeology humor that is meant to serve a dual purpose. It is meant as...
Humans have been collecting artifacts for centuries, whether it is for their aesthetic value or for ...
Collected sites are commonly seen as places requiring expert intervention to ‘save the past’ from de...
The collecting of cultural remains and the looting of sites have serious repercussions for the prese...
Archaeological relic hunting on public lands in the southwestern United States accelerated with 19th...
Despite changes in archaeological theory and practice over the past 40 years, most archaeologists ar...
Artifacts are crucial to the understanding of past societies. Archaeologists are able to learn about...
Archaeologists tend to rely on scientific methods to reconstruct past histories, an approach that ca...
Since the late 1800s, looting of prehistoric and historic Bles has been recognized as a serious thre...
All too often, archaeologists have viewed curation as a process that manages, rather than investigat...
In the 19th century, ‘scientific archaeologists’ split from their antiquarian colleagues over the ro...
Between 1998 and 2018, archaeologists have done progressively more research with outside communities...
Archaeology is a complex discipline that has contributed to the public understanding of the history ...
The world's archaeological heritage is under serious threat from illegal and destructive excavations...
Can You Dig It? is a little archaeology humor that is meant to serve a dual purpose. It is meant as...
Humans have been collecting artifacts for centuries, whether it is for their aesthetic value or for ...
Collected sites are commonly seen as places requiring expert intervention to ‘save the past’ from de...
The collecting of cultural remains and the looting of sites have serious repercussions for the prese...
Archaeological relic hunting on public lands in the southwestern United States accelerated with 19th...
Despite changes in archaeological theory and practice over the past 40 years, most archaeologists ar...
Artifacts are crucial to the understanding of past societies. Archaeologists are able to learn about...
Archaeologists tend to rely on scientific methods to reconstruct past histories, an approach that ca...
Since the late 1800s, looting of prehistoric and historic Bles has been recognized as a serious thre...
All too often, archaeologists have viewed curation as a process that manages, rather than investigat...
In the 19th century, ‘scientific archaeologists’ split from their antiquarian colleagues over the ro...
Between 1998 and 2018, archaeologists have done progressively more research with outside communities...
Archaeology is a complex discipline that has contributed to the public understanding of the history ...
The world's archaeological heritage is under serious threat from illegal and destructive excavations...
Can You Dig It? is a little archaeology humor that is meant to serve a dual purpose. It is meant as...
Humans have been collecting artifacts for centuries, whether it is for their aesthetic value or for ...