Managment of Beached Shipwreck Archaeological Sites: Defining Stability |
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Authors: | Jennifer E. Jones |
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Affiliation: | Coastal Resources Management, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC, USA |
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Abstract: | The archaeological remains of ships in the beach zone are part of a complex and dynamic system. Being periodically exposed and reburied, they vary between being both visible and frequently forgotten features of the physical and cultural coastal landscape. These limited and non-renewable resources are highly susceptible to instability within the landscape. Challenges to stability result in these resources being damaged, ignored, or forgotten, leading to a potential loss of pertinent social, economic, and physical information. Although little can be done to prevent certain physical actions, a better understanding of physical and cultural processes allows for their mitigation and better management practices for the beached shipwreck resource. This paper looks at how stability is defined in relation to beached shipwreck sites and how these definitions impact the management of the resource of two case study sites in Maine and North Carolina. |
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Keywords: | Beached shipwrecks coastal archaeology resource management stability |
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