Community recording and monitoring of vulnerable sites in England

Significant archaeological sites along England’s sinuous coast and on the foreshores of tidal estuaries are continually eroded by winds, waves and tidal scour. Alarmed by the rate of loss, the location of many of these sites has been noted during the national ‘Rapid Coastal Zone Assessment Survey’ p...

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Main Authors: Wragg, E, Cohen, N, Milne, G, Ostrich, S, Nimura, C
其他作者: Dawson, T
格式: Book section
语言:English
出版: Oxbow Books 2017
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author Wragg, E
Cohen, N
Milne, G
Ostrich, S
Nimura, C
author2 Dawson, T
author_facet Dawson, T
Wragg, E
Cohen, N
Milne, G
Ostrich, S
Nimura, C
author_sort Wragg, E
collection OXFORD
description Significant archaeological sites along England’s sinuous coast and on the foreshores of tidal estuaries are continually eroded by winds, waves and tidal scour. Alarmed by the rate of loss, the location of many of these sites has been noted during the national ‘Rapid Coastal Zone Assessment Survey’ programme initiated by English Heritage (now Historic England) and also by archaeological groups around the country. But until recently there had been no national standardised system in place to record these vulnerable sites in detail or to regularly monitor their fate over the longer term. CITiZAN: the Coastal and InterTidal Zone Archaeological Network provides a systematic national response to natural and anthropogenic forces threatening coastal and intertidal archaeology in England. The project employs similar methodologies to the recording and monitoring of fragile intertidal archaeology as its sister project, the Thames Discovery Programme, which has for the last decade monitored the archaeology of the Greater London Thames foreshore. <br>Both projects employ a system of community-based training and outreach programmes, creating an infrastructure to support a network of volunteers with the skills and systems in place to enable them to monitor and survey the highly significant but threatened archaeological sites around England’s coast and foreshores. This paper looks at the evolution of the methodologies employed by these projects, both archaeological and educational, as well as the implementation of standardised recording and monitoring using crowd-sourced data, and presents key findings from this ‘citizen science’ programme. Coastal erosion can rarely be halted, but the hope of TDP and CITiZAN is to involve the public in such a way that will help ensure archaeological sites can be recorded before they are destroyed.
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spelling oxford-uuid:23c582c0-cd82-4c12-a4c5-92a1d06f0c202023-10-13T15:36:22ZCommunity recording and monitoring of vulnerable sites in EnglandBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_1843uuid:23c582c0-cd82-4c12-a4c5-92a1d06f0c20EnglishSymplectic ElementsOxbow Books2017Wragg, ECohen, NMilne, GOstrich, SNimura, CDawson, TNimura, CLópez-Romero, EDaire, M-YSignificant archaeological sites along England’s sinuous coast and on the foreshores of tidal estuaries are continually eroded by winds, waves and tidal scour. Alarmed by the rate of loss, the location of many of these sites has been noted during the national ‘Rapid Coastal Zone Assessment Survey’ programme initiated by English Heritage (now Historic England) and also by archaeological groups around the country. But until recently there had been no national standardised system in place to record these vulnerable sites in detail or to regularly monitor their fate over the longer term. CITiZAN: the Coastal and InterTidal Zone Archaeological Network provides a systematic national response to natural and anthropogenic forces threatening coastal and intertidal archaeology in England. The project employs similar methodologies to the recording and monitoring of fragile intertidal archaeology as its sister project, the Thames Discovery Programme, which has for the last decade monitored the archaeology of the Greater London Thames foreshore. <br>Both projects employ a system of community-based training and outreach programmes, creating an infrastructure to support a network of volunteers with the skills and systems in place to enable them to monitor and survey the highly significant but threatened archaeological sites around England’s coast and foreshores. This paper looks at the evolution of the methodologies employed by these projects, both archaeological and educational, as well as the implementation of standardised recording and monitoring using crowd-sourced data, and presents key findings from this ‘citizen science’ programme. Coastal erosion can rarely be halted, but the hope of TDP and CITiZAN is to involve the public in such a way that will help ensure archaeological sites can be recorded before they are destroyed.
spellingShingle Wragg, E
Cohen, N
Milne, G
Ostrich, S
Nimura, C
Community recording and monitoring of vulnerable sites in England
title Community recording and monitoring of vulnerable sites in England
title_full Community recording and monitoring of vulnerable sites in England
title_fullStr Community recording and monitoring of vulnerable sites in England
title_full_unstemmed Community recording and monitoring of vulnerable sites in England
title_short Community recording and monitoring of vulnerable sites in England
title_sort community recording and monitoring of vulnerable sites in england
work_keys_str_mv AT wragge communityrecordingandmonitoringofvulnerablesitesinengland
AT cohenn communityrecordingandmonitoringofvulnerablesitesinengland
AT milneg communityrecordingandmonitoringofvulnerablesitesinengland
AT ostrichs communityrecordingandmonitoringofvulnerablesitesinengland
AT nimurac communityrecordingandmonitoringofvulnerablesitesinengland