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Challenges in Documenting Archaeological and Ethnological Collections in KE EMu. Stacey Girling-Christie, Archaeology & History Margot Reid, Artifact Documentation. North American Users Group Meeting, October 2006. Background.
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Challenges in Documenting Archaeological and Ethnological Collections in KE EMu Stacey Girling-Christie, Archaeology & History Margot Reid, Artifact Documentation North American Users Group Meeting, October 2006
Background • 1842 William Edmond Logan – Founder of the Geological Survey of Canada • 1910 Government of Canada creates an Anthropology division within the GSC • 1910 Edward Sapir – Ethnologist, became Division Head and first registrar • 1911 Harlan Smith - first archaeologist • 1964 regional archaeologists hired
Archaeology Collections • Mandate – Canadian archaeology • Sites located on crown land • Majority of the collections come from region of the Northwest Territories / Nunavut • Collections are predominately prehistoric • human remains collection • “Foreign” collections
Ethnology Collections • 61,000 objects of Aboriginal origin; all regions of Canada and small portion from outside Canada • acquired between 1879 and the present • 20% are works of contemporary art • large proportion purchased by ethnologists carrying out research in Aboriginal communities in first half of 20th century
Relationship of KE Modules - Archaeology CATALOGUE ACCESSION LOTS COLLECTION EVENT SITES 621,423 records 14,477 records 33, 597 records 26,722 records
CATALOGUE - Classification Chenhall Classification System
ACCESSION – Acquisition 1 Veronica Milly donor
Numbers Tab Link to Collection Event Record
SITES - Locality Problem: Site with multiple lots entering Lot and Concession information
Partnerships • 1992 Task Force on Museums and First Peoples published a report titled "Turning the Page: Forging New Partnerships Between Museums and First Peoples." • CMCC guided by the principles and recommendations outlined in the report. • Exhibitions, research, management and care of the collection, and repatriation are done in consultation and cooperation with Aboriginal people and communities.
Defining Sensitive Grave goods Human remains Sacred objects Traditional and sensitive care SITES information Provenience data Object lists for land claim negotiations Sensitive images and documents Repatriated material Values (monetary) Casts accessioned
Archaeology 621,423 Catalogue records 2,817 records flagged as sensitive .45 % of the records Ethnology 61,000 Catalogue records 3,600 records flagged as sensitive 6% of the records
Recording and Managing Information Creation of new tabs and fields in Catalogue • notes regarding repatriation or land claim inclusion • notes on associated archival documentation • traditional and sensitive care recommendations
Recording and Managing Information Creation of Events records • Recording visits and visitors
Recording and Managing Information Creation of Narratives records • Information from visitors
Other Functionality in KE • Shortcuts view and Page view • Tab switching • Icon “alerts” (“contact curator”)