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By William D. Lipe
In the 20th century, archaeologists made great strides in learning
to understand the material record of past human life. Concurrently,
destruction of the archaeological record increased as population
growth, economic development, and looting took a rising toll. During
the past one hundred years, most countries established laws to protect
at least major archaeological sites and to curtail illegal excavation
and export of antiquities. Although often ineffective in practice,
these laws formally recognized a national interest in archaeological
conservation. By the end of the century, some nations, primarily
in the developed world, had fairly effective legal and bureaucratic
systems for balancing the value of in-place conservation of significant
archaeological sites against economic developments that would destroy
them. The creation of organizations such as ICOMOS and ICCROM and
the promulgation of standards and agreements such as the World Heritage
Convention built a framework within which archaeological conservation
could be pursued at an international level, both complementing and
reinforcing national efforts.
Hence, the past century was a time of great progress in conservation
of the archaeological record. But what of the future? Below, I briefly
characterize the archaeological record and the threats to it, and
then consider its fate in the 21st century.
Nature and Value of the Archaeological Record
The archaeological record consists of the material remains of past
human activity, left on or just under the surface of the earth.
It is a peculiar kind of record, consisting of items as varied as
the foundations of razed buildings, pieces of broken pottery and
tools, remnants of campsites and hearths, bones of animals once
used as food, elaborate tombs and simple interments, fragments of
monuments to now-forgotten heroes, and images incised or painted
on natural rock surfaces. Beginning about five thousand years ago,
this material record was increasingly supplemented by the written
word. In many places, however, written texts have yielded only meager
information until quite recent times. The archaeological record
provides the primary source material for understanding most of human
history—all the way back to three million years ago, when humans
began to make stone tools. Some more recent portions of this record
are also considered by particular groups of present-day people as
their cultural heritage—the sites, monuments, and artifacts that
link them to a particular place in the world and to a particular
vision of their past.
As we press back in time, the identities of individual cultures
blur and are lost, but the record continues to speak of the lives
of peoples now known only by the names archaeologists give them,
and of how the complex history of humanity has unfolded. As read
and interpreted by archaeology, this record documents the great
events of human history—the spread of our human ancestors out
of Africa, the emergence of human artistic and technical abilities,
the peopling of all the continents save Antarctica, the multiple
inventions of agriculture, of cities, of complex polities. It also
yields fascinating glimpses of people from the near and distant
past whose art and manufactures we instantly recognize as a product
of our common humanity but whose lives were almost unimaginably
different from ours. The archaeological record tangibly links the
past and present because it has preserved the actual objects and
places used in ancient times. In addition to being a source of information
about the past, it connects us in an immediate, physical way with
real individuals and communities of long ago.
Archaeological research has produced remarkable insights into the
character and history of societies, but archaeological interpretations
are always provisional and often disputed. Nonetheless, the methods
of archaeology provide the best prospect for deciphering the material
record of human history. Although this record is often subject to
multiple interpretations, it has a stubborn materiality that limits
the possibilities. And for any given period of time, it is the only
record we will ever have. We must study it carefully and respectfully
and conserve what we can of it for the future so that new methods
can be applied, new questions be asked, and old questions be revisited.
Archaeological sites have been formed wherever people have lived.
The floors of oceans, lakes, and rivers also preserve sunken watercraft
and other evidence of human activity. The hundreds of thousands
of sites that have been recorded since the mid-19th century represent
but a fraction of those that exist. Even fewer have been studied
systematically, and fewer still have been actively protected. These
sites are primarily the best preserved, the most aesthetically pleasing,
the most monumental. The great majority of archaeological sites,
however, consists of the humble leftovers of the daily life of ordinary
people. Many are from periods before monumental architecture became
part of the human environment. Yet these "ordinary" sites
provide perspectives on the past as important as ones derived from
study of the rare and spectacular. Archaeological sites compete
for space with alternative human uses of an increasingly crowded
globe. Maintaining a tangible link with a distant past or preserving
opportunities for future archaeological research seldom rank high
in the priorities of growing societies. Although sites are numerous,
most are also very fragile. Several processes are accelerating their
destruction.
Threats to the Material Record of the Past
The archaeological record has always been under assault from the
forces of nature, but in the 20th century, human agency became the
major threat. As we move into the new millennium, the pace of destruction
increases exponentially. Economic development, fueled by population
growth and increasing wealth, is transforming the surface of the
earth. The extension and intensification of agriculture, the mining
of materials and minerals, the growth of cities and suburbs, the
development of reservoirs, transportation systems, and other public
works, all result in the destruction of sites. Laws requiring that
archaeological and historical values be considered in development
planning are effective in some places and for some kinds of projects,
but on a world scale, sites are lost to economic development at
an increasing rate.
The unprecedented wealth generated by development is also fueling
expansion of the antiquities market. This, in turn, promotes the
looting of sites in search of objects having aesthetic or antiquarian
appeal or direct value as "treasure." Such objects ordinarily represent
a small fraction of the artifacts sites contain. As sites are bulldozed
or rapidly hand-dug to find these few marketable items, there is
wholesale destruction of objects, structures, and other remains,
as well as of the stratigraphy and associated contextual information
upon which archaeological interpretation depends. Today, the typical
looted site is in a developing country where impoverished local
people make small sums by feeding artifacts into the antiquities
market. The end purchasers are the wealthy elite of the developed
world, and the profits go largely to dealers, gallery owners, and
middlemen.
Over the next 50 to 100 years, world population will continue to
grow, though at a slower rate than in recent decades. It is projected
to peak at between two and three times our present six billion.
Growth in economic development and hence in wealth is harder to
project, but barring a major worldwide depression, economies should
continue to improve worldwide, with more nations joining the "developed"
group. And more individuals worldwide can be expected to amass the
wealth needed to collect antiquities. Thus, the factors responsible
for the recent increase in archaeological destruction will surely
intensify.
Prospects for the 21st Century
What are the prospects that any significant fraction of the world's
archaeological heritage will survive the coming century? The outcome
will be determined by a complex interaction of demographic, economic,
political, and cultural factors. There will be great losses, but
as an intrinsically optimistic person, I can imagine some scenarios
under which the rate of loss will peak and than gradually slow,
leaving a diminished, but perhaps not thoroughly impoverished, archaeological
record. Although the outcome will largely be determined by large-scale
demographic and economic processes already under way, it is possible
for archaeologists and others committed to archaeological conservation
to exercise some influence, if they take the right steps and form
effective alliances with those with similar or overlapping interests.
Hope can be gleaned from the fact that a number of formerly poor
countries are developing robust economies and are undergoing the
demographic transition associated with higher levels of wealth and
education, evolving from agrarian and natural-resource-based economies
to industrial or postindustrial ones. The nations that have already
passed through this transition have stable or slowly growing populations
and high levels of income by world standards. They have fairly effective
laws protecting antiquities, and most support good systems of archaeological
parks, monuments, and museums.
Most economically developing countries already consider the archaeological
record a part of their national patrimony and have laws designed
to protect antiquities and at least a basic system of archaeological
monuments, preserves, and museums. If they follow the existing pattern,
these countries will expand their investments in archaeological
conservation, research, and public access as their economies improve.
The global economy and e-commerce seem likely to become even more
powerful, with possibly mixed effects on archaeological conservation.
On the one hand, the global economy will facilitate the transmission
of antiquities from poorer to richer sectors of the world, and e-transactions
may make the trade in illegally acquired or exported objects more
difficult to control. On the other hand, global economic integration
provides a platform for international agreements on issues such
as the environment, human rights, and labor standards. Negotiation
of future international trade agreements will offer opportunities
for strengthening and extending international protocols to control
illegal trafficking in antiquities and reduce the effects of economic
development on archaeological sites. Existing UNESCO and ICOMOS
committees and standards provide a framework for these efforts.
Nongovernmental organizations all over the world pursue a variety
of "causes," including preservation of ecosystems, endangered species,
and historic buildings. However, in situ conservation of the archaeological
record is only weakly promoted among such interest groups, especially
in the less-wealthy countries. In the United States, the success
of the Archaeological Conservancy in raising private funds to buy
and manage important sites shows what can be accomplished. Conservation-oriented
archaeologists and like-minded public activists need to develop
a worldwide network of privately and publicly funded organizations
devoted to saving portions of the archaeological record through
public education, by lobbying for proconservation laws and public
policy, and, if necessary, by acquiring important sites. Activist
individuals and organizations must also work to make archaeological
conservation more prominent on the agendas of environmental and
historic preservation organizations. Among other goals, there is
a need to recruit members of the media and entertainment elite to
spread the word that owning looted antiquities is destructive and
socially irresponsible. These efforts require hard work and in some
cases the negotiation of difficult alliances, but the potential
for success is there.
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A Native American student assisting at a
site being excavated by the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center.
The Center works with a Native American Advisory Group in
designing its archaeological education and research programs,
and it attempts to give interested Native American students
the opportunity to learn about archaeology firsthand. Collaborations
such as this between archaeologists and Native Americans show
that where there is mutual good faith, the interplay of multiple
perspectives and interests can invigorate archaeology. Photo:
Courtesy Crow Canyon Archaeological Center.
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The popularity of museum exhibits, books, television productions,
magazines, Internet sites, and tours devoted to archaeological topics
demonstrates that a large number of people worldwide find archaeology
fascinating. These individuals make up a potentially powerful base
of support for archaeological conservation, and they are likely
to increase rapidly in number as more countries develop relatively
wealthy, educated, aging middle classes. It is from this group that
the future activists so hopefully described above will be drawn.
Yet for the most part, archaeology buffs today are treated primarily
as passive observers of wonders brought forth from the earth by
the anointed professionals. Those engaged in "bringing archaeology
to the public" have a responsibility to clarify the link between
public enjoyment of archaeological discovery and the messy and often
unpleasant business of promoting archaeological conservation in
legislative and bureaucratic arenas, and through persistent efforts
to change public opinion. This desanitizing of archaeology may drive
away some now attracted to the field, but others may feel empowered
through the realization that conservation of the archaeological
record is not something that can just be left to the professionals.
In some places, efforts to slow the pace of archaeological destruction
are being mounted by indigenous peoples such as Native Americans
and Australian Aborigines, as well as by other ethnic and national
groups. Paradoxically, national or ethnic cultural identity movements
are flourishing at the same time that a rapidly integrating world
economy and its commercial popular culture are swamping local traditions.
Such movements often link a concern for preservation of archaeological
sites to a particular vision of group or national historical and
cultural heritage. In these contexts, religious or nationalist ideology
may dominate interpretation of the archaeology and cause conflicts
with the institutionalized skepticism and appeals to material evidence
that characterize professional archaeology. Nevertheless, in the
United States, the evolving relationships between archaeologists
and Native American groups show that where there is mutual good
faith, the interplay of multiple perspectives and interests can
invigorate archaeological research. Tensions will undoubtedly continue
to arise among archaeological researchers, activist conservation
organizations holding universalist views of the archaeological heritage,
and various ethnic and national identity movements that take an
interest in archaeology. Nonetheless, all are likely to have some
influence on what portions of the archaeological record survive
in the 21st century. Intellectual and political agendas can change,
but if the archaeological record is destroyed, it is gone forever.
Hence, there are good reasons for groups with different agendas
for archaeological conservation to find common ground—or at least
to minimize the energy spent in internecine conflict.
Although archaeological research affects only a small proportion
of the existing sites in a given year, excavation does consume portions
of the archaeological record, albeit in a way that yields systematic
records, documented collections, and, one hopes, publications. Nonetheless,
the archaeological record is a nonrenewable resource, and if a site
has been fully excavated, it cannot be revisited with new methods
or new questions in the future. New technologies such as remote
sensing, as well as the use of sophisticated sampling methods, have
helped archaeologists learn to use the archaeological record more
frugally. In many parts of the world, the complete excavation of
sites is now the exception rather than the rule. It is incumbent
upon archaeologists, however, to continue to develop and apply methods
that allow them to learn more from any given part of the archaeological
record, leaving intact as much as is feasible for research and educational
uses over a long-term future.
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As public demand grows for access to "developed"
archaeological sites, those managing such sites must be prepared
to invest substantially in conserving the irreplacable structures
and contexts that are exposed
to the elements and tourism. Here, visitors at Hovenweep National
Monument contemplate the Cajon site. Photo: Courtesy Crow
Canyon Archaeological Center.
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Archaeological parks and monuments provide the public with opportunities
to make tangible contact with past cultures, and they are important
vehicles both for sharing the results of scholarly research with
a broader audience and for giving the public concrete reasons to
value conservation of the in situ archaeological record. Over the
next century, public demand for access to excavated and "developed"
archaeological sites will surely grow even more rapidly than population
in many areas, as levels of education and wealth increase, as retirees
become proportionately more numerous, and as rates of tourism increase.
Those responsible for managing such facilities must be prepared
to invest substantially in conserving the irreplacable structures
and contexts that have been laid bare by excavation. It is simply
not acceptable to open sites for public education and enjoyment
only to see them rapidly disintegrate due to exposure to the elements
or to the impacts of visitation. Nor is it acceptable to excavate
sites to meet the demands of tourism without adequate funding for
analysis and reporting of the excavated contexts and materials.
There are also increasing needs for research on ways of conserving
earthen architecture, stone masonry, artifacts, and the other types
of remains that have survived from the past; for training technicians
to apply this knowledge; and for developing and applying standards
for site and artifact conservation. Furthermore, research and standards
related to visitor management are needed, as is research evaluating
visitor responses to the archaeological materials and the interpretive
messages they encounter.
It seems inevitable that population growth, economic development,
and elite acquisitiveness will pose enormous threats to the in situ
archaeological record throughout the world during the 21st century.
The protective infrastructure created in the 20th century is in
most places inadequate to cope with the magnitude of these threats,
but it offers a base upon which to build. Although there surely
will be huge losses, there are also some aspects of economic growth
that may create contexts for at least partially effective responses.
Those dedicated to archaeological conservation must redouble their
efforts to strengthen protective laws and public policies, to expand
public involvement in archaeological conservation, and to direct
their energies toward preserving and studying archaeological sites
rather than engaging in struggles among groups that approach conservation
from different perspectives. Archaeologists must be conservative
in their own uses of the archaeological record, so that future research
can continue to build on prior work. And we must do a better job
of conserving those archaeological sites and materials that are
put on public display in parks and monuments, even as the demand
for access to these sites rapidly increases.
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William D. Lipe is professor of anthropology at Washington State
University and is a research associate and member of the board of
trustees at the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, a nonprofit organization
in southwestern Colorado devoted to archaeological research and
public education. From 1995 to 1997, he was president of the Society
for American Archaeology (SAA), and he currently serves as the SAA
representative on the board of directors of the Register of Professional
Archaeologists.
The author wishes to acknowledge the following sources found useful
in preparing this article: "The Loss of Cultural Heritage, An International
Perspective," edited by Catherine M. Cameron, in a special issue
of Nonrenewable Resources, vol. 6, no. 2; Plundering Africa's
Past, edited by Peter R. Schmidt and Roderick J. McIntosh; Native
Americans and Archaeologists: Stepping Stones to Common Ground,
edited by Nina Swidler, Kurt Dongoske, Roger Anyon, and Alan Downer;
Vanishing Treasures
Web page, U.S. National Park Service.
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