Heritage of Value, Archaeology of Renown:
Reshaping Archaeological Assessment and Significance
Session Organisers: Timothy Darvill
& Clay Mathers
(Bournemouth
University and US Army)
From the beginning of archaeology as
a discipline, the concepts of value and significance have played a key
role in the development of theory and practice. Similarly, ideas about
the value and significance of archaeological resources continue to dramatically
affect how we define, manage and conserve the cultural record world-wide.
As the concepts of value and significance
have expanded in recent years to include a broader range of resource types,
analytical scales and wider scientific/public concerns, the complexities
of heritage management seem to have frequently outpaced both our imagination
and methodological tools. While varying degrees of idiosyncratic, ad hoc
and implicit assessment strategies continue to be commonplace in the day-to-day
practice of heritage management, theoretical models and operational examples
of best practice continue to be rare.
Although critical debate concerning
significance and value has generally languished since the peak in professional
and legislative interest nearly twenty years ago, important theoretical
and methodological developments have taken place in different parts of
the world since that time. Presentation of these new approaches will revive
a wide variety of heritage issues that are crucial to the growth of responsible
management and research strategies. In addition, these discussions promise
to make important contributions to the emergence of comprehensive heritage
policies in both developing and developed nations.
The papers presented in this session
highlight a variety of new theoretical and pragmatic approaches to value
and significance that are currently being applied by archaeologists in
North America, Europe and Australia. Particular emphasis will be placed
on the importance of: (a) explicit, but flexible assessment criteria; (b)
the use of complementary scales of analysis (from isolated finds and regional
landscapes to provincial and national domains); and (c) the need to document
the historical impact of archaeological theory, methods and conservation
strategies on the extant archaeological record. In addition, the session
will explore the socio-political and economic context of heritage management
- particularly the active/proactive role archaeologists can play in helping
to preserve samples of heritage resources that will better reflect our
culturally diverse societies and origins.
John Carman
(Clare Hall, Cambridge CB3 9AL)
The Accounting, The Economic and The Social:
What Price the Archaeological Heritage?
There are currently three independent
schemes of value being applied to the material heritage. Under the 'accounting'
school, heritage is given a financial value. Under the 'economic' school,
sites are assessed for their significance or importance. Under the 'social'
school, objects with symbolic value create a stock of cultural capital
for an individual or for a community. This paper will outline the consequences
of these 'schools' of value theory for the archaeological heritage and
will emphasize how they can be used in a co-operative manner to benefit
archaeology as a discipline.
Timothy Darvill
(School of Conservation Sciences,
Bournemouth University)
Sorted for Ease and Whizz": Approaching Value
and Importance in Archaeological Resource
Notions of "value" and "importance"
now have wide currency in archaeological resource management, providing
cover-terms for rather ill-defined measures commonly used to inform decision-making
at various levels. This paper argues for a distinction between "value",
as a set of socially defined orientations applicable to the whole resource,
and "importance" as an archaeologically defined scale applicable to specific
elements of the resource to allow ranking or discrimination. It is suggested
that the successful development, and widespread acceptance, of comprehensive
and easy to apply systems of discrimination in archaeological resource
management hinges on the integration of archaeological interest with more
general social interests.
Jane Grenville and Ian Ritchie
(University of York, York, and U.S.
Forest Service, USA)
Archaeological Deposits and Value
To bolster the position of archaeological
value in the marketplace, one model has been presented which weighs archaeological
values against the interests of business and development in England. This
model was developed at the University of York and is articulated by Martin
Carver. Key foundations of this model are that archaeological value is
better expressed as a research asset than as monument and that unless proposed
excavation matches key research questions, archaeological deposits should
be protected from development interests. This paper, from two researchers
from the same department, reviews the model in the cold light of practical
situations.
Jos Deeben and Bert Groenewoudt
(Rijksdienst voor het Oudheidkundig
Bodemonderzoek, Holland)
Handling the Unknown: The Expanding Role of
Predictive Modeling in Archaeological Heritage Management in the Netherlands
The availability of distribution maps
and an overall picture of the scientific state of affairs is a precondition
for significance evaluation and selection. The foundation of the expertise
centre ARCHIS in 1989 marks the beginning of a systematic effort on these
frames of reference of in the Netherlands. Due to various circumstances,
the archaeologically documented distribution patterns still contain numerous
misrepresentations and conceal major gaps in our knowledge - in space as
well as in time. The rapid reorganisation of the Dutch landscape poses
an acute threat, especially to the unknown (and best preserved) part of
the archaeological heritage, which is buried under natural sediments and
man-made (plaggen) soils. The paper will show how sub-soil sampling and
predictive modelling are being used to make the unknown more manageable
within an overall environmental planning policy. One example of this strategy
is the recently completed archaeological sensitivity map of the Netherlands.
Barbara J. Little
(National Park Service, USA)
The National Register of Historic Places and
the Shaping of Archaeological Significance
Evaluation criteria for the National
Register of Historic Places are used for the daily work of Cultural Resource
Management. Defining the research potential (and, rarely, other values)
of archaeological properties according to these criteria has affected the
way the public as well as the profession regards the significance of sites.
I address the questions: Since the establishment of the National Register,
how has the evaluation of sites changed? and has the application of Criterion
D changed? I also comment on the importance of context development to evaluating
sites, districts, and multiple properties related under a particular theme.
Clay Mathers, John Schelberg and Ron Kneebone
(George Mason University, Fairfax,
VA, USA and US Army Corps of Engineers, Albuquerque, NM, USA)
'Drawing Distinctions': Towards a Scalar Model
of Value and Significance
Despite the relative and context dependent
nature of archaeological significance, the methods used to evaluate it
continue to emphasize limited assessment criteria, resource types and analytical
domains. Defined in this narrow and piecemeal fashion, current approaches
to archaeological significance provide a poor foundation for the interpretation
and conservation of our cultural/ecological heritage. In an effort to expand
the depth and breadth of archaeological significance evaluations, this
paper illustrates how GIS and Exploratory Data Analysis tools can be used
in a variety of thematic and geographic contexts to promote more responsible,
comprehensive and informed decisions about heritage management and conservation.
Laurajane Smith
(University of New South Wales, Australia)
Archaeological Significance and the Governance
of Identity in Cultural Heritage Management
This paper examines how public debates
over the meanings and values given to material culture and the past are
arbitrated through the CHM process.
It is argued that CHM fulfils a governmental
role in the management not only of physical places, but also the intangible
values associated with and
ascribed to heritage items.
As a consequence CHM becomes directly involved in the governance of a range
of social and cultural identities that are
built upon and reinforced by interpretations
and knowledge about the past and its material culture. These arguments
are illustrated with reference
to particular case studies in indigenous
CHM from south-eastern Australia.
Joseph A Tainter
(Rocky Mountain Research Station,
USA)
Heritage Management, Significance and Contemporary
Environmental Change
Archaeology and heritage management
should lead the study of contemporary environmental problems. Their failure
to do so stems from several factors, including customary approaches to
significance evaluation. Traditional assessments implicitly assume that
the value of a heritage property is inherent and immutable, and related
linearly to size, depth, and material content. These assumptions select
against the preservation of many properties important to understanding
today's environmental issues. Resolving this problem will come in part
from recognizing that evaluation is both value-laden and transitory, and
that the intensity of past behaviour is related non-linerarly to contemporary
criteria of significance.