University of Utah Anthropological Paper No. 131
Cultural Resource Management (CRM) refers to the discovery, evaluation, and preservation of culturally significant sites, focusing on but not limited to archaeological and historical sites of significance. CRM stems from the National Historic Preservation Act, passed in 1966. In 1986, archaeologists reviewed the practice of CRM in the Great Basin. They concluded that it was mainly a system of finding, flagging, and avoiding—a means of keeping sites and artifacts safe. Success was measured by counting the number of sites recorded and acres surveyed.
This volume provides an updated review some thirty years later. The product of a 2016 symposium, its measures are the increase in knowledge obtained through CRM projects and the inclusion of tribes, the general public, industry, and others in the discovery and interpretation of Great Basin prehistory and history. Revealing both successes and shortcomings, it considers how CRM can face the challenges of the future. Chapters offer a variety of perspectives, covering highway archaeology, inclusion of Native American tribes, and the legacy of the NHPA, among other topics.
Author(s): Alice M. Baldrica, Patricia A. DeBunch, Don D Fowler
Series: University of Utah Anthropological Paper, 131
Publisher: University of Utah Press
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 152
City: Salt Lake City
Contents
Figures and Table
Introduction (Alice M. Baldrica, Patricia A. DeBunch, and Don D. Fowler)
1. CRM in the Great Basin: Thirty Years On (Don D. Fowler)
2. SHPO Perspective on Cultural Resources Management: Lessons Learned (Roger Roper)
3. The Past and Future of CRM under the Guise of Section 106 (F. Kirk Halford)
4. Programmatic Agreements and the Growing Process of Inclusion (Richard C. Hanes)
5. Dry, Dusty Bits: An Informatics Perspective (Eric Ingbar)
6. GIS Probability Models: The Ideal and the Real(ized) (Alyce A. Branigan)
7. The Status of Great Basin Ethnographic CRM Studies and Reports since 1990 (Ginny Bengston)
8. Tribal Consultation in Nevada and Eastern California: A Thirty-Year Program Evolution in the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest (Fred P. Frampton)
9. Issues in Great Basin Historic Preservation: One Practitioner’s Considerations (Diane L. Teeman)
10. Thirty Years of Highway Archaeology and Its Implications (James Bunch and Patricia A. DeBunch)
11. Better with Time: Past Challenges and Future Directions in Great Basin Historical Archaeology (Renée Corona Kolvet)
12. How’s Business? A Review of Forty Years of CRM and the Used-Site Business (William J. Cannon)
13. What We Knew Then and What We Know Now: Thirty Years of CRM Archaeology in the Great Basin (Pat Barker)
14. Cultural Resource Management in the Great Basin: What Have We Learned? Part II (Alice M. Baldrica)
References
Contributors