Lessons That Count: What We Have Learned From Large, Multi-Year Underwater Excavations
Part of: Society for Historical Archaeology 2014
Exploring this years’ conference theme, Questions that count, this session will explore what we have learned as a discipline from underwater excavations that spanned over many seasons and involved extensive research and conservation programs. The session will see presenters focus on the same themes and discuss on the successes and challenges for each theme. This will set the stage for a follow-up panel discussion to expand on the same themes as well as other subjects relating to these large projects. The discussed themes will be: funding, operations in the field, short- and long-term staffing, research, publication, presentation to the public and long-term economic benefits of the project.
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-8 of 8)
- Documents (8)
- A Big Project for a Small Submarine: H.L. Hunley, Recovery, Conservation and Interpretation (2014)
- Fifteen years downstream’ ...Reflections on the HMS Swift Archaeological Project (Argentina) (2014)
- La Natière 1999/2008: What we have learnt from a Large, Multi-years French underwater excavation (2014)
- Lessons that Count: The La Belle Project, A Large-Scale Excavation in the Gulf of Mexico (2014)
- The Mary Rose: The Legacy of a Large-Scale Excavation in the UK (2014)
- Shipwrecks of the Roaring Forties: a maritime archaeological reassessment of some of Australia’s earliest Shipwrecks (2014)
- The Underwater Archaeology of Red Bay, Labrador: A Large-Scale Project Conducted in Sub-Arctic Waters (2014)
- The Vasa: A Pioneer in Large-Scale Underwater Excavations (2014)