What Guides Us with Collections? A discussion on Rethinking our Relationship with Artifacts

Author(s): Mark Warner

Year: 2019

Summary

This is an abstract from the "What Guides Us with Collections? A discussion on Rethinking our Relationship with Artifacts" session, at the 2019 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology.

This forum is a structured discussion on how historical archaeology handles the volume of materials generated through excavation. HA has not critically evaluated the vast differences in material production technologies that create the artifacts we excavate or account for differential impacts on curatorial practices. A hand blown bottle from the 1700s and a 1920 Mason jar are largely treated the same despite one being the product of individual agency and the other produced by a machine. The impact of such differences are not factored into field and lab practices resulting in more contemporary sites generating tens if not hundreds of thousands of artifacts – which in turn result in overflowing curation facilities and ad hoc solutions that do not serve the discipline. The goal of this forum is to begin a dialogue to establish good practices guidelines for historical collections that are responsive to the complexities of the material world we work with.

Cite this Record

What Guides Us with Collections? A discussion on Rethinking our Relationship with Artifacts. Mark Warner. Presented at Society for Historical Archaeology, St. Charles, MO. 2019 ( tDAR id: 449015)

Keywords

Spatial Coverage

min long: -129.199; min lat: 24.495 ; max long: -66.973; max lat: 49.359 ;

Individual & Institutional Roles

Contact(s): Society for Historical Archaeology

Record Identifiers

PaperId(s): 513