27th December 2005, 02:47 PM
Well I can't say that I'm surprised that this discussion has broken down so spectacularly after a promising start. It always seems to boil down to a them vs us mentality. And in this case it seems to have been initiated by MD's getting defensive about comments from archs who probably don't represent the majority opinion. Nothing could have been surer. Sigh...
What I really have problems with is this retreat and retrenchment and an underlying assumption that MD's and Archs actually do different things so don't need to abide by similar standards. We all remove archaeological material from its context and have an obligation to record that context.
Now it seems to me that many MD's and a few Archs are not willing to do this. The difference is that the Archs have a raft of regulations to make them do it, while the MD's are only really appealed to on ethical grounds, and unsurprisingly probably find it more work than they are confortable with (so don't).
If you ask an arch what he would ideally like a MD to record he is unsurprisingly going to say he'd like standards similar to the ones he is required to adhere to. He's not dictating to MD's, he's asking for an equal application of ethical guidelines.
The real debate here is whether removing finds from topsoil should warrant the same level of obligation. I would argue that it shouldn't, and as has been pointed out, using heavy plant to remove topsoil shows that commercial archaeology agrees. BUT MD's don't always limit finds removal to topsoil. This is what most archs have problems with.
A MD who removes a find from a stratified deposit beneath the topsoil is in effect an archaeologist at that point.
Why then not be obliged to record to the same standard?
Md's may argue that a) the law doesn't require the to.
b)it would require expensive kit.
c)They don't have the specialist knowledge to differentiate topsoil from stratigraphy.
Can you imagine archs of any type (including amateurs)using any of these excuses and being taken seriously. It would make other archs very angry. So why do MD's get taken seriously and allowed to hide behind the hobby status.
Amateur archaeologist are also doing it as a hobby, but are required to attain a high standard. The ones I've worked with don't complain that they are being dictated to, get defensive, and refuse to fulfill their ethical obligation to record.
For me the dividing line between Metal detecting and Archaeology, (and we need a dividing line as long as MD's are largely unwilling to record to the same standard as archs) is the base of the topsoil. I can see no way to patrol that border, and it seems some archs would like to move the frontier to include the topsoil as well. I can understand why MD's are angry about this. If the MD community wants lower recording standards for topsoil (which is reasonable), then it needs to figure out how to limit detecting to it. If not I feel that the hobby is in an untenable position and this discussion may as well end.
What I really have problems with is this retreat and retrenchment and an underlying assumption that MD's and Archs actually do different things so don't need to abide by similar standards. We all remove archaeological material from its context and have an obligation to record that context.
Now it seems to me that many MD's and a few Archs are not willing to do this. The difference is that the Archs have a raft of regulations to make them do it, while the MD's are only really appealed to on ethical grounds, and unsurprisingly probably find it more work than they are confortable with (so don't).
If you ask an arch what he would ideally like a MD to record he is unsurprisingly going to say he'd like standards similar to the ones he is required to adhere to. He's not dictating to MD's, he's asking for an equal application of ethical guidelines.
The real debate here is whether removing finds from topsoil should warrant the same level of obligation. I would argue that it shouldn't, and as has been pointed out, using heavy plant to remove topsoil shows that commercial archaeology agrees. BUT MD's don't always limit finds removal to topsoil. This is what most archs have problems with.
A MD who removes a find from a stratified deposit beneath the topsoil is in effect an archaeologist at that point.
Why then not be obliged to record to the same standard?
Md's may argue that a) the law doesn't require the to.
b)it would require expensive kit.
c)They don't have the specialist knowledge to differentiate topsoil from stratigraphy.
Can you imagine archs of any type (including amateurs)using any of these excuses and being taken seriously. It would make other archs very angry. So why do MD's get taken seriously and allowed to hide behind the hobby status.
Amateur archaeologist are also doing it as a hobby, but are required to attain a high standard. The ones I've worked with don't complain that they are being dictated to, get defensive, and refuse to fulfill their ethical obligation to record.
For me the dividing line between Metal detecting and Archaeology, (and we need a dividing line as long as MD's are largely unwilling to record to the same standard as archs) is the base of the topsoil. I can see no way to patrol that border, and it seems some archs would like to move the frontier to include the topsoil as well. I can understand why MD's are angry about this. If the MD community wants lower recording standards for topsoil (which is reasonable), then it needs to figure out how to limit detecting to it. If not I feel that the hobby is in an untenable position and this discussion may as well end.