Archaeological Resource Management in the UK: An IntroductionJohn Hunter, Ian Ralston A. Sutton, 1993 - 277 pages Examines the impact on the archaeology profession of heritage management and legislation, stricter planning controls, changing land use, and the pressure of public concern and commercial interest regarding archaeological sites. Among the discussions are the problems of field work, the management of |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 17
Page 6
... position themselves that they are actually in touch with their constituency ; they must have some awareness of what their publics think , are likely to think , and how they will probably react . While EH manifestly had a fairly sharp ...
... position themselves that they are actually in touch with their constituency ; they must have some awareness of what their publics think , are likely to think , and how they will probably react . While EH manifestly had a fairly sharp ...
Page 62
... position is difficult to justify given that the UK is a signatory to the European Convention on the Protection of the Archaeological Heritage , Valetta ( CoE 1992 ) . Article 2 of this convention commits each member state ' by means ...
... position is difficult to justify given that the UK is a signatory to the European Convention on the Protection of the Archaeological Heritage , Valetta ( CoE 1992 ) . Article 2 of this convention commits each member state ' by means ...
Page 82
... position with LBC . Listing gives a building an important statutory protection but is not intended to be a process that involves an absolute ban on any future change . Circular 8/87 contains details of the departmental thinking on the ...
... position with LBC . Listing gives a building an important statutory protection but is not intended to be a process that involves an absolute ban on any future change . Circular 8/87 contains details of the departmental thinking on the ...
Contents
the relationships between theory and practice | 11 |
The British archaeological database | 19 |
The structure of British archaeology | 30 |
Copyright | |
21 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Archaeological Resource Management in the UK: An Introduction John Hunter,Ian Ralston No preview available - 2006 |
Common terms and phrases
activities advice aerial Ancient Monuments application archaeological areas assessment authorities become bodies British building carried central changes Chapter Church collections Commission concerned conservation consideration considered consultants contract Council cover cultural database Department detailed effect England English Heritage environment established example excavation existing field finds funding further grants groups historic identified important increasing individual interest interpretation involved issues land landscape legislation listed listed building London major material matters museum nature objects operations organizations particular past period planning possible potential practice present preservation problems professional programme proposed protection published reasons recent record regional relation remains rescue resource responsibility role Scheduled Scheduled Monument scheme Scotland significant SMRS Society specific structure survey taken tion units University Wales
References to this book
Managing Archaeology John Carman,Malcolm Cooper,Anthony Firth,David Wheatley No preview available - 1995 |
Archaeology And Geographic Information Systems: A European Perspective Gary R Lock,G Stancic Limited preview - 1995 |