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Subject:
From:
Linda Derry <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 19 Jul 2018 10:55:51 -0500
Content-Type:
text/plain
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Some one ought to publish a  picture book showing all these interesting
interpretive methods for archaeological sites (with short discussion of
pros and cons of each installation).  The National Association of
Interpretation, as well as archaeological venues,  might  be interested.
Might also make a good thesis or dissertation.

Anyway, I'd buy a copy.

Linda Derry
Site Director, Old Cahawba Archaeological Park
Alabama Historical Commission
9518 Cahaba Road, Orrville, AL 36767
park:  334/ 875-2529
[log in to unmask]




On Wed, Jul 18, 2018 at 2:30 PM, <
[log in to unmask]> wrote:

> The Presidio of San Francisco (NPS) and the Presidio of Santa Barbara
> (Calif. State Parks) where4 suites are still used for parking today, and
> needs to be refreshed every few years.  It does give some ideas of the look
> of these urban sites in the Spanish 18th century.  We have also used
> f0oundation cobbles in the street to mark the boundaries of the walls.
> This also slows traffic somewhat i9n Santa Barbara. We co0mbine these
> efforts with excellent interpretive picture on signs around the site.
>
>
> Robert L. Hoover
> Santa Barbara Trust for Historic Preservation
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Pete Gregory <[log in to unmask]>
> To: HISTARCH <[log in to unmask]>
> Sent: Wed, Jul 18, 2018 11:08 am
> Subject: Re: archaeological interpretation
>
> Linda, we have marked the outline of the Spanish Presidio Nstr. Senora
> Delos Adaes
> {Los Adaes State Historical Comemorative Site)  here in Louisiana with a
> line of garden timbers, stack of two pinned by iron stakes (re-bar). You
> can step across it , see it from the air or drones easily and sub- surface
> impacts are minimal. The timbers do not cost
> much and are not visually obtrusive. There are drawbacks. They attract
> fire ants here. And treated or not they deteriorate, they have to be mowed
> with a weed eater and a section has to be opened so mowers can pass through.
>  The timbers have been moved and  remote sensing  shows little impact on
> the features.
>     At one point the Office oF state parks planted clover at Poverty
> Point, the large
> Prehistoric site where there a series of concentric ridges, Red and white
> clover gave
> Pretty stark impressions of the features. Seasonally, not blooming, not so
> clean. Now gone from the site. This does not introduce stone of any sort at
> least. You might contact the National Center for Preservation, Technology
> and Training and find more advice.,
> They are on-line. NPS uses other things, shredded rubber from re-cycled
> tires makes nice paths those plants invade it.
> Hope this helps.
> Pete Gregory
> Williamson Museum, N.S.U. OF Louisiana
>
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
> > On Jul 18, 2018, at 12:11 PM, Linda Derry <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> >
> > Histarchers,
> >
> > Can anyone suggest some good examples  of sites where the loca
> > large buried archaeological features h a publicly available b
> > interpretation without digging up the features or harming them in any
> way?
> > ..../
>
> > For example, in Franklin TN, I saw that a portion of backfilled Civil
> War.
> > trenches were marked out using grey slag teron the grounds that surface.
> The slag
> > was contained by landscape edging.   I noticed that grass was beginning
> to
> > emerge through the rock  so it might not be a y.  T.    installation
> unless
> > there was a plan to regularly spray the rock with chemical weed killer.
> >
> > I want to mark the location of a very large semi-circular moat around a
> > 15th century late Mississippian village.  It was back filled in the mid
> > 19th century, but was used for a few decades as the centerpiece of an
> early
> > 19th town plan.  I thought about planting a tall prairie style grass,
> but I
> > what I really need is something that is a visual clue but something that
> > visitors can easily walk across to access the acreage inside the
> > semicircle.   I am hoping to accomplish this without much disturbance to
> > the mid-19th century fill in side the moat. And of course, I do not have
> an
> > unlimited budget.
> >
> > Any ideas or examples?  I know there is someone out there that can help
> me
> > solve this puzzle.
> >
> > Linda Derry
> > Site Director, Old Cahawba Archaeological Park
> > Alabama Historical Commission
> > 9518 Cahaba Road, Orrville, AL 36767
> > park:  334/ 875-2529
> > [log in to unmask]
> >
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