Saturday, July 31, 2010

Archaeological Conservation Success in England?

Foreign collectors of portable antiquities often hold up the Portable Antiquities Scheme of England and Wales as a model that should be applied by other countries which are a source of the antiquities they want to collect. As one of them said recently:

PAS is a system better able to weather lean budgets because it relies on finders to help record objects and the State only retains for its own purposes those objects it deems significant. There are no curatorial expenses associated with most objects as these are returned to the finder and/or landowner after recordation.
(see my comments here).

The occasion for this lauding was the announcement that this week the Scheme made its 400 000th record of artefacts reported by a metal detecting artefact hunter and collector. Yet from the point of view of the conservation of the archaeological resource a more important statistic would be the number of items that despite the Scheme are being dug out of the archaelogical sites of England and Wales without record. An attempt to estimate those numbers (not an unreasonable one in my opinion) is thought provoking. By how much would that estimate have to be lowered to make the results acceptable as any kind of conservation success?

In England and Wales there are believed to be (PAS figures) about 8000 metal detector using artefact hunters out there sweeping likely looking fields for collectable and saleable items. In thirteen years, the Portable Antiquities Scheme has seen 400 000 of them. That is an average of 31000 a year. That’s less than four objects a year per detector user. Is this all they are finding? Many of them can find that many recordable items on a single productive site in a single afternoon’s detecting. How many fishermen would be out there on the lakes and rivers in all weathers and continue their hobby if they only caught one fish every three months for thirteen years? What is not being shown to the PAS in the course of the despoiling of Britain's archaeological record merely as a source of collectable geegaws for entertainment and profit? What kind of a "conservation success" is that?

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Thursday, July 22, 2010

Towards a Bibliography for Looted Antiquities

One of the long established on-line bibliographies on looted antiquities was created by Hugh Jarvis at Buffalo ("Looting Question").

This resource is intended to be provide a comprehensive overview of what is often a controversial topic, for scholarly and classroom use. Coverage is intended to include extreme perspectives as well as more neutral or consensus-seeking views. The list is extensive, with the hope that users will be able to find a range of these items close to hand. While the main focus is on North America, materials from around the world are noted whenever possible (and certainly encouraged). Items are added as they come to my attention or are contributed by others. Annotations are mine except as noted, and are NOT intended to be incendiary. Comments and additions are most welcome!
Such a bibliography is helpful and is a useful starting point. There are bound to be some missing items. Among them various works by James Cuno, Peter Watson's Sotheby's: Inside Story and The Medici Conspiracy, or Sharon Waxman's Loot!

I have tried to note some key works on a public list ("Archaeological Ethics") through WorldCat. This list is ongoing and does not pretend to be complete - and tends to relate to books (the purpose of WorldCat). I would welcome further suggestions.

Kimberly Alderman noted Jarvis' list on her Cultural Property and Archaeology Law blog. What has surprised me is the reaction from some: "this site and its bibliography are a disgrace to academic research"; "This is a selective bibliography that leaves out opposing views".

Another bibliography ("Readings") has been posted by the Cultural Property Research Institute (CPRI). The emphasis is different though there is an unevenness. Again where is Peter Watson's Sotheby's: Inside Story and The Medici Conspiracy?

Readers are invited to add other online lists as a comment below.

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Monday, July 19, 2010

SAFE congratulates David Gill and Looting Matters

Thank you for sharing with us what really matters, and for using social media to broaden discussions about these important issues that affect us all. May your third anniversary be the beginning of many more to come.

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Friday, July 16, 2010

Publicity Where Publicity is Due

The PRNewswire has picked up on a story first aired by Fabio Isman, writing for the Art Newspaper, and now being disseminated and further investigated by David Gill on his Looting Matters blog. It concerns the serious allegation that "a number of antiquities acquired by the National Museum of Archaeology in Madrid appear to feature in the dossier of Polaroid photographs seized from dealer Giacomo Medici." The investigation has revealed that in 1999, the museum purchased 181 pieces from "Spanish financier Jose Luis Varez Fisa" for $12 million, boasting about the "great leap forward" this purchase would make to their collection. However, the work of the journalist, in conjunction with archaeological and photographic-assessment experts, have cast the original "surfacing" conditions of 22 of these artifacts into doubt, tentatively identifiable as they are within the Medici dossier, some still covered in soil or pre-restoration. As followers of this blog and Looting Matters will know, this is certainly not the first case of Medici objects surfacing again long after the legal case has finished. I doubt it will be the last. We eagerly anticipate further developments as this investigation moves forward.

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Thursday, July 15, 2010

Culture Beyond Oil: BP and Museum Sponsorship

There is a short video on a protest in the Great Court of the British Museum over BP's sponsorship of museum exhibitions. This is in connection with the ongoing oil 'gush' in the Gulf of Mexico.

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Saturday, July 10, 2010

Responses to Natural (and human-made) Disasters

It is no surprise that we are quick to react to the destruction of cultural heritage. With the growth of the heritage industry, the public has taken on the responsibility of cleaning up the mess: our own and that of Mother Nature.

In addition to SAFE’s public awareness campaign to highlight the destruction caused by the earthquakes in Haiti, other organizations have participated with assessment and initiatives focused on cultural recovery such as the U.S. Committee of the Blue Shield led by Corine Wegener. Recently, IMLS released a statement that paintings in Haiti are restorable, according to conservators participating in the Haitian Cultural Recovery Project.

Our reaction to the oil spill in the Gulf is still in the organizational stages or so it seems. There has been a call to the archaeological community by the Department of Interior for help to clean up and protect sites. The National Park Service (NPS) deployed personnel “to prepare for and respond to oil impacts along the Gulf Coast." The U.S. National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites (US/ICOMOS) created an interactive map highlighting heritage sites at risk.

Other public statements focus on the protection of prehistoric sites like the shell middens along the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Finally, the Associated Press started asking questions about the possible damage to shipwrecks and "whether BP will be held responsible for ruining underwater sites."

While response to protect human, plant, and animal life comes first, I hope action to preserve cultural sites and to mitigate damage will immediately follow.


Image: National Park Service, produced by Cultural Resources GIS, 11 June 2010.

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Monday, July 5, 2010

Size does not matter

When it comes to looting and smuggling antiquities, size does not appear to matter. Not anymore, anyway.

Special Agent James McAndrew of the Department of Homeland Security mentioned in a recent presentation that the days are gone when only small portable artifacts are smuggled. Indeed, the case of the 27-ton Tang sarcophagus stolen from the tomb of Tang Empress Wu Huifei (AD 699-737) has taken this alarming trend to a new extreme.

How did a 27-ton stone coffin measuring 4 meters long, 2 meters wide and 2 meters high leave China unnoticed? It is huge (as the photo indicates) in size and weight, in addition to its obvious historical significance. How did it enter the US? Container ship?

Something this big had to have been hacked into many pieces before the looters and the smugglers could haul it, even with heavy machinery. Just think: if the coffin were cut up into 20 pieces, each would still weigh over a ton. How many people did it take? Who would display a huge stone coffin in a private home or was it going to be resold to some museum?

So, finally, what is all worth it? For the buyer in Virginia who reportedly paid $1 million for the piece, any price is too high when his purchase had to be returned. Given China's penalties (considered Draconian by some) the price the looter(s) pay could be life. For us all, the potential damage to the piece itself, the rest of the tomb and the history it contains can never be repaid. Even if the sarcophagus was not 27-ton heavy.

Looting at any size does not pay.

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Sunday, July 4, 2010

Iraq's Antiquities Police: The Bitter Fruit of US Indifference to the Looting of Iraq's Archaeological Heritage

I have been putting off posting about this front-page New York Times story. In part I've delayed because I needed to check some of its facts with colleagues; in part because I and others have been pushing the story to contacts in the US government asking them to do something (and Iraqi colleagues have been mobilizing to do the same for their government); in part because I try to make it a principle to not write when too angry to think straight....


(post continues at The Punching Bag)

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Giving "victims" of the antiquities trade a voice: science in the public's interest.

It's been some time since I've written for SAFE, but an article discovered while searching the bioarchaeological literature for my own research struck me as so incredible, I felt I just had to share it here. This link will lead you to a recent Journal of Forensic Sciences article by Seidemann, Stojanowski and Rich, detailing how they put cutting edge bioarchaeological and forensic human identification techniques to use in an almost unbelievable case...the identification of a human skull almost sold on eBay!! Yes, you read that right! As the article explains, the investigation and research began when the Louisiana Division of Archaeology was informed by the National Park Service that someone was attempting to sell a probable Native American skull on eBay, from an undisclosed address in Lake Charles, Louisiana. The seller's photos made it clear that the skull had been unearthed at some point in the past, as soil was still adhering to or filling most major orifices. In this case, the seller was fortunately cooperative, both voluntarily turning over several artifacts believed to be associated with the skull, and claiming what was deemed to be "real ignorance" of prohibitions against selling human remains; thus direct charges were dropped.

The seller suggested that the skull might have come from within the grounds of the "Pohler Estate," formerly owned by Roy Pohler, a "well known antiquities collector in the early to middle 20th century." Items from his collection are still in circulation, for example Item DIOT5 here. His globe-spanning collection was mostly collected before relevant national and international conventions were put into place, and was almost entirely without specific provenance. Therefore, investigators rightfully concluded that there was no guarantee that the skull derived from within the boarders of the current state of Louisiana, and thus bioarchaeological, soil, palynological (pollen) and mineralogical analyses were deemed necessary to identify the likely ancestral affinity of the skull and pin-point its geographic origin with as much certainty as possible.

Work of this nature would be crucial to make certain that the remains were indeed Native American, and to determine which contemporary tribe (or the descendants of a tribe forcibly relocated in recent history) the skull should be repatriated to under NAGPRA (Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act). As the "Louisiana Unmarked Human Burial Sites Preservation Act" goes even further than NAGPRA in attaching severe civil and criminal penalties for the disturbance, trade or sale of human remains, regardless of ancestry, determining if the individual represented by the skull could have derived from a site or population currently within the borders of Louisiana took on even more significance.

Without going into too much detail, I can summarize the bioarchaeological analysis discussed in the article thusly: a general success! I emphasize the word general because, although the skull is one of the most telling regions of the human skeleton when it comes to determining age, sex, and population affinity, without as much of the rest of the skeleton as possible, conclusions can only be general. Unfortunately, no infracranial bones (bones below the skull) were recovered in association. General age and sex was easy enough to determine due to the skull's good condition, but the article stresses that the sparse and wide-spread nature of large collections of North American Native American remains that have been thoroughly analysed and published, in terms of the most common measurements of the skull, face, and teeth that can be used to place a skeleton of unknown ancestry into its statistically most probable population(s), are few and far between.

In this era of more carefully controlled collaborative excavations of Native American prehistoric sites (a good thing!) and, on the other hand, occasionally "premature" repatriation of skeletal collections before all possible information is obtained (a bad thing, in my opinion), the amount of published data useful to forensic anthropologists and antiquities trade investigators in cases like this is unlikely to skyrocket. Further confounding the assigning of this skull to a particular historic or contemporary population, the article notes, was the unknown radiocarbon (C14) age of the remains and the presence of deliberate cranial deformation, a practice common to many Native groups throughout the Americas, but one which limits the number of useful measurements. Nevertheless, the skull was identified as Native American (likely pre-contact).

What really intrigued me, however, was how the soil and pollen analyses came into play. First of all, soil sampled from the skull reacted "violently" when mixed with water and hydrofluoric acid, "typical of soils from the Atlantic Coastal Plain that contain a great deal of fine-grained mineral matter, including the clay mineral caolinite." Although no pollen was recovered, many charcoal fragments and fungal spores from several general Southeast US species were. Together with a very high presence of quartz (characteristic of loess soil), the small size of the charcoal particles, and the important lack of flowering plant pollen suggest that the individual "was interred in sediments that had accumulated in a xeric, fire-prone terrestrial environment that supported little in the way of higher plant life." Such a combination of factors, on the North American continent, pointed to the Middle Mississippi Valley.

The authors conclude that although scientific attempts at "fleshing out" this individuals' history, given only a skull, produced only general results, the science brought to bare was at the very least able to secure repatriation within Louisiana and, as important, the prompt action taken and the cooperation of the seller took one more "set" of human remains off the market. As the authors note, and as I've blogged about before here and on my own blog, the sale of human remains and/or directly associated artifacts on eBay continues despite eBay's own "Prohibited and Restricted Items Policy on Human Remains," which specifically targets Native American remains and associated grave goods. A 2004 article the authors cite adds to this concern by noting the ease with which unscrupulous eBay dealers can label prehistoric remains as modern medical specimens, the high prices remains can fetch, and the deliberately targeted looting this encourages. Lest we in the antiquities trade monitoring community think that only artifacts 'surface' here, the articles discussed above dismantle that illusion. Hopefully after the rather public expore of these loopholes by the cases discussed above, even more due diligance will continue and an actual ban on the sale of all human remains will be enforced. Thankfully in the Louisiana case above, concerned citizens and scientists intervened in time.

(Image courtesy of dl.keg.org).

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