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The Advisory Council on Underwater Archaeology advocates, promotes, and provides advice on responsible public education and stewardship of underwater cultural heritage for present and future generations. The ACUA supports the ethical principals [2] of the Society for Historical Archaeology. The ACUA encourages all archaeologists to perform to ...
The Underwater Archaeology Branch serves four primary functions: 1) HISTORIC PRESERVATION & RESOURCE MANAGEMENT. The Branch ensures that the Department of the Navy remains in compliance with applicable federal laws and regulations pertaining to activities directed at the Navy’s over 20,000 sunken military craft, including the administration of the Department’s archaeological, historical ...
The process of archaeology is essentially destructive, as excavation permanently changes the nature and context of the site and the associated information. Therefore, archaeologists and conservators have an ethical responsibility to care for and conserve the sites they put at risk. [2]
Lynne Goldstein (born September 18, 1953) is an American archaeologist, known for her work in mortuary analysis, Midwestern archaeology, campus archaeology, repatriation policy, and archaeology and social media. [1] She is a professor of anthropology at Michigan State University and was the editor of American Antiquity between 1995 and 2000. [2]
The IVMF has designed a free, comprehensive career training, certification and employment program called Onward to Opportunity in conjunction with the Veterans Career Transition Program (O 2 O). [13] [14] This program is designed to launch veterans into their next career with more than 30 industry-recognized career tracks and courses. [15] [16]
The history of archaeology in the US is rooted in the part-time enthusiasm of, usually wealthy, Antiquarians who formed the field's initial foundation. By the start of the Great Depression , the field was mostly practiced by a small group of elite academics with varying levels of research standards. [ 2 ]
Alexandra Jones is a historical archaeologist and educator at Goucher College. [3] She is the founder and chief executive officer of Archaeology in the Community, "a Washington, D.C.–based nonprofit that aims to increase awareness of archaeology and history."