The Archaeology Channel

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21 avril 2010

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Archaeological Legacy Institute (ALI) is an independent, nonprofit, tax-exempt (501[c][3]), research and education corporation registered in Oregon in 1999. Recognizing that the archaeological record is the legacy of all human beings and dedicated to bringing the benefits of archaeology to a wider constituency, ALI was founded to address a number of critical issues now facing archaeology and its potential beneficiaries:

  • Damage to archaeological sites is taking place at an alarming rate, but support for preservation programs could be enhanced through the use of modern communications technology to increase public awareness that their archaeological legacy is seriously endangered.
  • Despite many millions of public and private dollars spent annually, the poor availability of project reports (the "gray literature"), written mainly to satisfy minimum government requirements, inhibits both research progress and popular support for archaeology.
  • Too little is written for an information-hungry public by professionals, who receive few incentives for such activity.
  • Interested and normally honest lay people, far more numerous than professional archaeologists, often have extensive knowledge of archaeological sites and artifacts that they will not share with professionals for fear of being accused of misdeeds.
  • Media news items, seldom prepared by archaeologists themselves (who are busy doing research, teaching, or meeting clients' needs), are frequently shallow, inaccurate, and incomplete.
  • Indigenous peoples, whose past is often the subject of archaeological study, and despite decades of objection, still have too little voice in conduct of research, share too few of its benefits, and consequently often do not support studies that could improve knowledge and appreciation for their cultural heritage.
  • School curricula that could employ archaeological knowledge to help inform future adults about their place in history and relations with other peoples typically offer only cursory coverage of archaeology, which is fun and informative about very important issues, but so far is seldom used as an educational tool.
  • Archaeological research itself, particularly in the area of fieldwork, is still largely conducted in habitual and inefficient ways that would be greatly improved by the focused application of modern technologies that could significantly reduce research costs.
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Tagged:

ALI, Archaeology, independent, News, nonprofit

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English

Media on this Channel

  • 28m 11s

    Video News from TAC, May 2013

    uploaded by: TheArchaeologyChannel

    chaîne: The Archaeology Channel

    (1) In the 1970s, near the Greek village of Aidonia, a mule fell into a hole.  Upon rescuing the animal, villagers discovered a rare golden treasure buried amidst a group of skeletons.  They tried to keep it a secret.  This is the story of the plunder of Mycenaean tombs and the recovery of precious cultural heritage.… En savoir plus

    uploaded date: 15-05-2013

  • 28m 19s

    Video News from TAC, February 2013

    uploaded by: TheArchaeologyChannel

    chaîne: The Archaeology Channel

    Video News from TAC, February 2013 (Egyptian cave hides royal mummies; Robert Blake and English Civil War)

    (1) Three thousand years ago, Egyptian priests gathered up the mummies and grave goods from many royal tombs and hid them away in a secret cave.  Three thousand years later, a young boy chanced upon the tomb.  Then the looting began.

    En savoir plus

    uploaded date: 12-02-2013

  • 28m 21s

    Video News from TAC, December 2012

    uploaded by: TheArchaeologyChannel

    chaîne: The Archaeology Channel

    In a family feud nearly two centuries old, two Appalachian families keep alive their tradition of egg fighting.  The annual Peters Hollow Easter Egg Fight in Stoney Creek, Tennessee, was a way to settle a dispute over which family's chickens laid  harder eggs.  The Watermill Theatre in Berkshire, England, resides in a structure with a three hundred year history.  The wooden … En savoir plus

    uploaded date: 13-12-2012

  • 28m 25s

    Video News from TAC, September 2012

    uploaded by: TheArchaeologyChannel

    chaîne: The Archaeology Channel

    A Maya pyramid at El Zotz, Guatemala, with images done in dramatic painted stucco and a royal tomb full of artifacts and human remains, may have linked the deceased lord to the eternal sun; technicians using ancient building techniques work to save crumbling walls at  “The Mithraeum of the Painted Walls” in Ostia Antica, the harbor of classical Rome; workers restore Paschoal Ha… En savoir plus

    uploaded date: 11-10-2012

  • 28m 19s

    Video News from TAC, October 2012

    uploaded by: TheArchaeologyChannel

    chaîne: The Archaeology Channel

    Important decisions surrounding archaeological work in the path of a major Pennsylvania highway involved sensitive discussions among 15 Native American tribes, the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation and the Federal Highway Administration.  For archaeologists, the research was exciting, yielding prehistoric longhouses, a palisade, key-hole structures, and 100,000 artifacts.  For… En savoir plus

    uploaded date: 11-10-2012

  • 28m 17s

    Video News From TAC, August 2012

    uploaded by: TheArchaeologyChannel

    chaîne: The Archaeology Channel

     Always a cultural melting pot, Malaysia has cultural and historical links to distant places in the Indian and Pacific oceans. Archaeology here is young, but already reveals a rich and deep cultural record both on land and in the sea extending from Paleolithic sites in the Lenggong Valley to the Neolithic, Iron Age, and more recent periods.… En savoir plus

    uploaded date: 14-08-2012

  • 28m 13s

    Video News From TAC, July 2012

    uploaded by: TheArchaeologyChannel

    chaîne: The Archaeology Channel

     Excavations in 2005 prior to the upgrade of “The Avenue of the Saints,” U.S. Route 61 in 15 miles of the Mississippi River valley in Missouri, revealed over 1000 buried features, 60,000 artifacts, and copious environmental data from over two dozen sites spanning 10,000 years; In a video interview at TAC Festival 2011, Dr.… En savoir plus

    uploaded date: 14-07-2012

  • 28m 10s

    Video News from TAC, May 2012

    uploaded by: TheArchaeologyChannel

    chaîne: The Archaeology Channel

     The Penn Museum’s exhibit, “Maya 2012: Lords of Time,” rides a wave of interest in the Maya calendar; which this year reaches the end of something, and hopefully the beginning of something else; the recently concluded Louvre Museum exhibit, “In the Kingdom of Alexander the Great: Ancient Macedonia,” featured nearly 500 priceless objects from northern Greece; … En savoir plus

    uploaded date: 22-05-2012