An assessment of the cultural value of the site and its significance in Burra Charter terms. • Aesthetic Value: The Landscape of Mount William quarry is surrounded by ranges such as Macedon Range, Dandenong Ranges and Great Diving Range, and standing on the top of the Mount William quarry will able to see the range and the valley. It also home to restricted pocket of original vegetation in modern day along the edge of ridge. • Historic Value: Mount William Stone Axe Quarry is one of the most importance, largest and intensively worked quarries in Australia, with more than 260 mining pits and many mounds of waste rock and flaking floor scatters across the site surrounding the work station. • Scientific Value: Diabase (greenstone) is suitable to aboriginal lifestyle with tool is a raw material which is product of an age of volcanic activity, tough, fine-grained basalt and shock-resistance so it won’t shattered when impact.
The Field Research Procedure this paper focuses on covers excavations between 1983 and 1993 by Martin Carver. The Field Research Procedure assumes that archaeological data cannot be discovered but are defined and collected as a result of archaeologically informed choice. Data are variables which are chosen
Since they don’t have the living people from the past here in the future. They have to piece together what they know about the past societies by their findings. They have to piece together what they find to know what they did on an everyday basis, what they ate and much more. When excavating a site
Early prehistoric Europe might well have been more complex than previously thought if the complex settlement seen in this cave - along with other sites from about the same time - are anything to go by. Greek officials originally saw this as a potential tourist attraction but archaeologists led efforts to keep destructive tourism
Stakeholder Assessment/Community Analysis Introduction For the Stakeholder Assessment Assignment , this paper will assess information regarding an Archivist Position for The Arkansas Department of Heritage (DAH). This assessment will be discussing the following areas as it pertains to the position. This paper will outline who the stakeholders for the DAH are and briefly describe their function and their information needs. In addition to other forms of research, data collection methods utilized in this discussion include the use of the online GIS tool, Social Explorer, to generate reports to get a more in-depth analysis of the demographics of the community served by the organization, including age group, education level, socioeconomic level,
His work transformed our understanding of the ancient world and set the standards for modern archaeological practice. " If Evans had failed to record the exact
Take the 1871 dig for Troy, a lost city. Heinrich Schliemann was digging in Turkish ground when he accidentally destroyed crucial parts of Troy. Schliemann was very careless with his work, and destroyed much of the rich history that could have given many clues. In source 1, paragraph 7, it states, “He had his workers open up huge trenches in the earth, shoveling out layers of debris and artifacts that had lain undisturbed for centuries.” Although they found the city, most of it was destroyed.
Indiana Jones is a classic movie about a college professor who teaches ethical archaeology in class but when he’s outside of the classroom he is out in the field, fighting bad guys, running from natives, or destroying ancient temples in search for treasure. Although many would like to think this is what archaeology is all about, many real archaeologists would be disgusted to work alongside Indy on a dig. Any real archaeologist can tell you that this hollywood spoof is just a fictional depiction of how the job really is and may create hype of the scientific field but doesn't really show us what the field is really all about. There are codes of ethics to archaeology that our buddy Indy just doesn't quite follow ( Fagan 2012:37).
Artifact Description and Connection(s) to Domain: The First Thanksgiving – Group Playwriting or Song Composing lesson plan effectively demonstrates proficiency in Domain Two since it requires students to reach high expectations when creating a play or composing a song about the first Thanksgiving. The use of a variety of instructional strategies to facilitate learning for various learning styles, the appropriate content based on South Carolina State Standards with a specified learning goal, teacher monitoring to assess and aid students in their understanding, and a summative assessment with a detailed rubric for students to use as a guide further demonstrates proficiency of Domain Two since the combinations of the components are used to enhance students’ learning during this particular instructional plan. By developing a lesson plan that provides students with two options, creating a play or composing a song, a variety of
The need to memorialize events or people is complex; in some cases, monuments honor moments of great achievement, while in other cases, monuments pay homage to deep sacrifice. A monument 's size, location, and materials are all considerations in planning and creating a memorial to the past. In any case, the need to honor or pay homage to a specific person or event is prevalent within society. A monument has to mean something to the society it is place in. The location of a monument is perhaps the most important aspect of creating a successful monument to honor and show respect to a person or event.
Artifacts, such as burial mounds, are an indication to support
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. The novel, Dr. Jekyll, and Mr. Hyde is a story about the struggle of Dr. Jekyll with the other side of his evil self, known to the people around as Edward Hyde. We learn that he adopted his evil self through lab activities so that he could practice whatever wickedness that would make the good self of Dr. Jekyll feel shame about. To a great extent, the characters in the novel Dr. Lanyon and the Lawyer Utterson fail to be good friends to Dr. Jekyll.
Ever since the emergence of mankind, humans have always prioritized their search for food and water. Even today the need for sustenance is still prominent; however, methods for producing it have evolved over time. The Paleolithic people went about scavenging, hunting, fishing, and gathering on their quest for food. The Neolithic Revolution marked a transition from such practices into the “cultivations of crops and the domestication of animals.” (Strayer, pg.12) Even after thousands of years, although techniques have changed, the basic concept of agricultural cultivation has still remained similar.
Current consensus on global climate change is not promising. As such, efforts have been mounted to reverse this direction, but it is not clear that the implemented preservation and conservation efforts have been successful. Preservation is used in the sense of keeping something in its original state and free from decay, and conservation is used in the context of the protection of nature and natural resources, so the terms will be used interchangeably. Failures of these efforts can be traced back to the 1864 Yosemite Grant and the 1964 Wilderness Act and the problematic precedents they set. The existing paradigm of preservation in environmental science is rooted in notions of settler colonialism and imperialism, and demarcates certain conceptualizations
The Neolithic Revolution was not a positive event in world history. It was a negative event in world history because farmers were less healthy and were poorly taking care of themselves due to lack of nutrients in their crops. Farmers focused more on high-carbohydrate crops, but with hunting and gathering, it provided a mix of wild plants and animals for their diet, helping them gain more protein and a better balance of nutrients. Nutrition is important to this era because strength is needed in order to live. They had to work hard for their food, whether it was hunting for it or growing it.