17th February 2013, 01:42 AM
If you want to focus on evaluation being inexpensive - it depends what you are comparing it to. It is clear from the context that evaluation is inexpensive in comparison to excavation, and perhaps in comparison to the other costs of development. I don't believe that "inexpensive" is misapplied, even if the actual costs may rise to several thousand pounds for a site which might have 100 houses built on it, each selling for £100k. I
I think museums should be prepared to take material that they think is worth preserving, and should perhaps be open to persuasion by professionals seeking to fulfill their legal and moral responsibilities where there is borderline material. Their definition may be constrained by the resources they have to deal with the material. In my view it is up to museums to decide what they should take or keep - it is our job to offer it.
I think museums should be prepared to take material that they think is worth preserving, and should perhaps be open to persuasion by professionals seeking to fulfill their legal and moral responsibilities where there is borderline material. Their definition may be constrained by the resources they have to deal with the material. In my view it is up to museums to decide what they should take or keep - it is our job to offer it.