+ All Categories
Home > Documents > The Business of Archaeology - Memorial University · DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY GRADUATE SPEAKER...

The Business of Archaeology - Memorial University · DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY GRADUATE SPEAKER...

Date post: 10-Jun-2020
Category:
Upload: others
View: 3 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
1
DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY GRADUATE SPEAKER SERIES PhD PROPOSAL DEFENSE Brent Suttie PhD Student Dept. of Archaeology The last four decades have seen enormous change in the discipline of archaeology; from research, and site inventory-focused work, towards overt dominance of Cultural Resource Management-related projects. The primary goal of the proposed research project is to examine critically the current state of archaeological methods used to locate unknown archaeological sites in research and as part of archaeological impact assessments conducted in response to proposed development projects. In this context I propose to compare traditional to emergent archaeological methods, with regards to efficiency, results, standards of practice and ethical suitability of approach. I am also interested in the regulatory climate of CRM archaeology throughout North America and I propose to conduct a thorough comparative jurisdictional review and analysis to establish whether sufficient latitude exists to promote innovation in these areas, and the role of industry, government and academia in future methodological innovations within the industry. The Business of Archaeology: A critical examination of emergent vs. entrenched methods and approaches to archaeological field assessment TIME: 1:00pm DATE: October 11, 2019 ROOM: Queen‘s College 2013 . www.mun.ca/archaeology
Transcript
Page 1: The Business of Archaeology - Memorial University · DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY GRADUATE SPEAKER SERIES PhDPROPOSAL DEFENSE Brent Suttie PhDStudent Dept. ofArchaeology The last four

D E P A R T M E N T O F A R C H A E O L O G Y

G R A D U A T E S P E A K E R S E R I E S

PhD PROPOSAL DEFENSE

Brent SuttiePhD StudentDept. of ArchaeologyThe last four decades have seen enormous change in the discipline of archaeology; from research, and site inventory-focused work, towards overt dominance of Cultural Resource Management-related projects. The primary goal of the proposed research project is to examine critically the current state of archaeological methods used to locate unknown archaeological sites in research and as part of archaeological impact assessments conducted in response to proposed development projects. In this context I propose to compare traditional to emergent archaeological methods, with regards to efficiency, results, standards of practice and ethical suitability of approach. I am also interested in the regulatory climate of CRM archaeology throughout North America and I propose to conduct a thorough comparative jurisdictional review and analysis to establish whether sufficient latitude exists to promote innovation in these areas, and the role of industry, government and academia in future methodological innovations within the industry.

The Business of Archaeology:

A critical examination of emergent vs.

entrenched methods and approaches to

archaeological field assessment

TIME: 1:00pm

DATE: October 11, 2019

ROOM: Queen‘s College 2013

.

www.mun.ca/archaeology

Recommended