Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 116
pro vyhledávání: '"Sarah H. Schlanger"'
Autor:
Hildebrant, Barbara S.
Publikováno v:
Material Culture, 2006 Apr 01. 38(1), 109-113.
Externí odkaz:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/29764322
Autor:
McBrinn, Maxine
Publikováno v:
American Antiquity, 2006 Jan 01. 71(1), 186-187.
Externí odkaz:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/40035329
Autor:
Maxine McBrinn
Publikováno v:
American Antiquity. 71:186-187
Autor:
Sarah H. Schlanger
Publikováno v:
Advances in Archaeological Practice. 11:42-51
Culturally significant landscapes, which evoke and promote strong feelings of attachment among their constituencies and advocates, pose a management challenge for federal agencies. Current cultural resources laws and policies focus largely on the phy
Publikováno v:
Advances in Archaeological Practice. 8:307-312
The alternative mitigation program that the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) established in 2008 to address impacts to the archaeological resources in the Permian Basin of southeastern New Mexico, now one of the most active of the nation's oil and gas
Autor:
Sarah H. Schlanger
Publikováno v:
Perspectives on Southwestern Prehistory ISBN: 9780429301490
Perspectives on Southwestern Prehistory
Perspectives on Southwestern Prehistory
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::5b82177f3df4026fca85e2f9c6f6d655
https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429301490-11
https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429301490-11
Publikováno v:
Advances in Archaeological Practice. 4:149-160
The Permian Basin Programmatic Agreement (PA) is an alternative form of Section 106 compliance offered mainly to the oil and gas industry in southeastern New Mexico for projects located on Bureau of Land Management (BLM) land. Proponents of projects
Autor:
Lynne Sullivan, Lynne Sebastian, Christopher Polglase, John F. Doershuk, Francis P. McManamon, Tom McCulloch, Sarah H. Schlanger, William D. Lipe
Publikováno v:
Advances in Archaeological Practice. 4:132-148
Public agencies at all levels of government and other organizations that manage archaeological resources often face the problem of many undertakings that collectively impact large numbers of individually significant archaeological resources. Such sit
Publikováno v:
KIVA. 81:80-99
Some 40 years after the field of cultural resource management was conceived, the most surprising consequence may be that the sheer quantity of archaeological observations made by the field's practitioners has far outstripped our ability to synthesize