Cover
Table of Contents
Introduction: Progressing with Collections
Section 1: Valuing, Benefiting from, and Using Archaeological Collections
Chapter 1: Doing Research with Archaeological Collections by Julia A. King
Chapter 2: Tribal Voices on Archaeological Collections by Angela Neller
Chapter 3: Care, Access, and Use: How NAGPRA HasImpacted Collections Management by Sheila Goff
Chapter 4: Integrating Curation Training in AcademicPrograms and Beyond Danielle M. Benden
Chapter 5: Collaborative Mitigation: Creative SuccessStories Using Archaeological Collections by Heather l. Olson and Ralph Bailey
Section 2: Tackling Collections Issues
Chapter 7: Being a Curator: Revisiting the Curation of Archaeological Collections from the Field to the Repository by Lynne P. Sullivan and S. Terry Childs
Chapter 8: On Whose Grounds? The Importance of Determining Ownership Before There Is a Collection by Sara Rivers Cofield
Chapter 9: Orphans on the Shelf (and in the Attic) by Heather l. Olson and Danielle R. Cathcart
Chapter 10: The Preservation and Management of Archaeological Records by Sara Rivers Cofield and Teresita Majewski
Chapter 11: The Possibility of Deaccessioning Federal Archaeological Collections by S. Terry Childs
Chapter 12: Every Artifact Is (not) Sacred: A Call to Rethink Historical Archaeology’s Collection Management Assumptions and Practices by Mark S. Warner
Chapter 13: Dodging the Repository Money Pit: The Iowa Experience by John l. Cordell, John F. Doershuk, and Stephen C. Lensink
Chapter 14: Implications of Limited Collections Policies and In-Field Analysis by Brian Crane and Michael Heilen
Epilogue—Behind the Crimson Curtain: A Once and Future Tale of Collections by Jenna Domeischel and Michael K. Trimble
About the Contributors
Index