Hi everyone!
I am in WI and interested in looking for arrowheads and other artifacts on private land with permission of the landowner come spring. What do I need to do to properly document any finds? Thanks for any advice and or tips.
Surface finds on cultivated land are normally not considered to be of muchvalue since they are no longer in situ. Identify what you find and log it but, don't dig.
I did 4 hours of volunteering today at a local nature center and participated in an actual archaeological dig. The lead archaeologist did a corn chicha invocation thanking the people of the land and the participants before we began. The entire morning was spent setting up the 4 sites. Tomorrow the excavation begins. After there will be a native tree planted in each of the four holes.
Hi. I'm not familiar with the law over there, but getting permission from the owner of the land is certainly a good idea - especially in the US where some landowners may be a little overly trigger-happy.
Here in the UK "field walking" and looking for archaeological artifacts of the type you mention is considered perfectly OK by archaeologists - as you say, they've already been removed from their archaeological context by decades (or even centuries) of ploughing, and there are a number of important sites which were only discovered thanks to well-informed members of the public noticing an unusually high number of worked flints or potsherds in an area and notifying professional archaeologists that they may have stumbled across something worth investigating. What is frowned upon is digging - many sites have been badly damaged by treasure-hunters with metal detectors who don't record the exact position of any finds they make, thus rendering it without value from an archaeological viewpoint as @t1nick says.
Thank you. I am interested in surface finds in plowed fields or along creek beds NOT digging. So I agree with you that these artifacts are no longer in any type of context for science. Still, I am hoping to record where the finds take place and take photos of their placement in case they may lead to something of archaeological importance. I have done some research and it appears legal here on private land with the landowner’s permission.
With all due respect. Permission from whom? I sure you mean the land owner, but once removed the projectile point loses all its scientiuc informational value. This is just anither form of pot hunting. If you must remove artifacts, Im sure the state archaeologist has a cooy of the forms they use to record finds on legitimate expeditions. All finds should be properly documented to be of scientific value.
The government prohibits collecting, excavating, or otherwise disturbing historical and /or archaeological sites on state or federal lands. Cannor stop, except in certsin circumstsnces on private property. But its dtill unethical.
I am curious why it would be unethical if the plowing of the field will only destroy it? I would like to document the area, take photos/videos, gps the coordinates and fill out any forms that may be helpful to science before that happens.
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Posted by qpr81there's a small island in front of the temple site and they found artifacts even there.
Posted by qpr81there's a small island in front of the temple site and they found artifacts even there.
Posted by qpr81there's a small island in front of the temple site and they found artifacts even there.
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Posted by qpr81Trajan's column in Rome. Shame they put a pope on top of it. Even though this is a monument raised over a genocide it's still something worth seeing.
Posted by qpr81Trajan's column in Rome. Shame they put a pope on top of it. Even though this is a monument raised over a genocide it's still something worth seeing.
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