Artefact hunters in Britain and beyond have been pointing to the "number of finds recorded" by the Portable Antiquities Scheme as a proof of how responsible the country's eight plus thousand artefact hunters are. They are implying that all of these finds are reaching the PAS from metal detectorists, and that certainly is the impression that the rest of us have been getting. "Cultural Property Observer" Peter Tompa has been keeping a close eye on the PAS and raises a point which needs to be addressed. He asserts (in a comment to my request for information on the average size of that excavation archives) that archaeologists are supposed to report their finds "under either the Treasure Act or the PAS". On his own blog he develops that point "the guidance to archaeologists seems clear on that point". He postulates that British professional archaeologists should "report finds that don't meet the definition of treasure- only if they do so will the PAS database created with the help of the public be complete as possible", and suggests that there be a survey conducted into whether "whether English and Welsh archaeologists report under the Treasure Act and the PAS and if not, why not?" and criticises me for my comments on what he said. His post has received the support of several collectors and metal detectorists here, here and here. They seem to accept that what their US lawyer friend says about British archaeological policies must be true, "The fact that Mr. Barford had to delete his earlier comments speaks volumes.." guffaws one. (I deleted a comment from my own blog because it was unnecessarily rude, we cannot allow the discussion here to drop to metal detectorists' levels, can we?)
It seems to me that a point is being missed in this rather one-sided discussion. An average archaeological project, even a small one, will produce several hundred 'small finds' and other artefacts, and a large one tens and hundreds of thousands. I am not privy to how many find-producing projects took place in England in Wales in 2013. It would probably be several hundred at least, each of which produces several hundred finds which according to Peter Tompa and his metal detecting pals will have been reported to the PAS to bulk it out and make the "PAS database created with the help of the public [as] complete as possible". In 2013 55176 records on 80876 objects were added to the PAS database (so that's about 40 000 less than the number of objects in an iron objects report I wrote for Canterbury Archaeological Trust from a single site a while back). If Mr Tompa is right, then the PAS database is being swamped by finds reported from their projects by professional archaeologists (as is the case in the Treasure Trove process of Scotland) which would mean that concomitant numbers of finds can be deleted from the total of those submitted by eight-thousand plus artefact hunters with metal detectors. That would give nothing for the metal detectorists to guffaw about.
Of course in reality there is nothing to explain away, the PAS is not financed to record finds coming from professional archaeological projects. There are other venues, other media for that. The PAS is for the objects found by people not having access to those venues, members of the public who are not professional archaeologists. The PAS (used to?) call themselves a "community archaeology" project. Peter Tompa has (again) seriously misunderstood the function and background to the PAS and is misleading his readership.
But then, what's this doing in the 2013 statistics?
Controlled archaeological investigation 37 33 Controlled archaeological investigation (stratified) 156 105 Controlled archaeological investigation (topsoil stripping) 2 2 Controlled archaeological investigation (unstratified) 381 347
Is this in some way the result of metal detectorists collaborating with archaeologists on sites? In which case, why are these finds here? Have the finders kept them rather than handing them in to the project director? What is the explanation of 156 objects found in stratified contexts on a controlled archaeological excavation in 2013 turning up in the PAS database? Do the archaeologists conducting the project and the landowner know? Where are these objects now? (The ones I looked at were all "returned to finder", was that the archaeologist, or an artefact hunter working within an archaeological project?). More clarity would be desirable here, just what is the PAS and its "partners" engaged in here?
You are confusing me again after I thought we were on the same page. My post said reporting by archaeologists under the treasure act is mandatory; the PAS is voluntary for everyone, but I'm not sure why more archaeologists are not reporting if the point is to give as clear a picture of what's out there as possible. Keeping the data locked up on some archaeologist's laptop won't do that.
ReplyDeleteI would not like to say if I am confusing you, or you are confusing yourself.
ReplyDeleteThe Treasure Act is the Treasure Act. If my mum, or Roger Bland or Prince Andrew found Treasure in walking their dogs, they'd all have to report it like anyone else. Archaeologists too. I really do not see what you find confusing here. Nobody has been questioning that. The law is the law.
However, as far as reporting by archaeologists to the PAS goes, I think you ARE confused what the PAS outreach is for. Frankly, if you do not understand, I do not consider that my fault, the PAS gets millions of quid to make everyone aware of what they do and why and I do not get a penny to do that.
Tell you what, why not address that question to Roger Bland? Refer him to my query [http://paul-barford.blogspot.com/2014/01/archaeologists-request-for-information.html] and you ask HIM why I cannot get from HIS website and not them the details I am being sent by several helpful archaeological units. OK? He's the guy to ask.