Essential Archaeological Concepts
A number of general concepts have been identified as being vital to
understanding the archaeological past and its wise use.
Cultural Systems are the Focus of
Anthropological Study
1. All humans have the same basic needs, which are met in culturally distinct ways.
2. Culture enables people to adapt to social and natural environments.
3. Culture enables people to change these environments.
4. Aspects of culture are interdependent.
5. Culture changes constantly, reflecting and shaping a number of
forces.
Awarness of the Past
is a Fundamental Element of Archaelogical Study
1. The Americas have been home to hundreds of cultures for at least 12,000 years.
2. Since many bygone cultures left no written records, they can only be studied by examining the physical evidence that they left behind.
3. These material remains--such as sites, artifacts, and structures--are part of a nation's cultural, or heritage, resources.
4. Archaeological, ethnographic, and historical resources add a unique
dimension of understanding to cultural studies.
Archaeology is the Scientific Study of
Cultures? Based on Their Material Remains
1. Archaeology is a subdiscipline of anthropology, which is the comparative study of humankind and human behavior.
2. It is multidisciplinary.
3. It follows scientific process.
4. It is a science of content and association.
5. It employs a range of specialized tools and methods.
6. Data derived from archaeological study can provide unique insights and a
sense of time and depth to other disciplines.
Humans Affect and are Affected by Cultural
Resources
1. Cultural resources provide us with a perspective on our own time and place, and an understanding of cultural diversity.
2. The past is a shared heritage that is valued by different people for different reasons--including scientific, aesthetic, spiritual, social and political, commercial and economic, consumptive and non-consumptive, and intrinsic reasons.
3. Societies have different approaches to ownership of the past.
4. Cultural and social trends partially define cultural resource
issues. Among the contemporary issues are:
- the rapidly
changing nature of science and its applicability to archaeology;
-
Native peoples' activism;
- sensitivity toward the treatment of human
skeletal remains;
- growing avocational interest in the discipline;
- curation of artifacts and samples; and
- trafficking in
antiquities.
Stewardship of
Archaeological Resources Saves the Past For the Future
1. Cultural resources are subject to myriad destructive forces, both human and natural.
2. Cultural resources can be protected and managed for a variety of uses, and many governmental agencies mandate their protection.
3. Wise management depends on a broad knowledge of the resources that are present and the questions that the past can help to answer.
4. Everyone can be involved in managing and conserving cultural resources, locally and globally, based on their values and behavior.
5. Individuals have an obligation to weigh the consequences and impact of their actions on the irreplaceable evidence of past cultures.
This has been excerpted from Guidelines for the Evaluation of Archaeology
Education Materials, prepared by the Formal Education Subcomittee, Public
Education Committee, Society for American Archaeology, 1995.