HomeMy WebLinkAbout2011/07/19 Item 08 Attachment A Appendix_HH_nrb15_6_VI
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U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service
VI. HOW TO IDENTIFY THE TYPE OF SIGNIFICANCE OF A
PROPERTY
INTRODUCTION
When evaluated within its historic context, a property must be shown to be significant for
one or more of the four Criteria for Evaluation - A, B, C, or D
(listed earlier in Part II). The
Criteria describe how properties are significant for their association with important events or
persons, for their importance in design or construction, or for their information potential.
The basis for judging a property's significance and, ultimately, its eligibility under the
historic context
Criteria is . The use of historic context allows a property to be properly
evaluated in a nearly infinite number of capacities. For instance, Criterion C:
Design/Construction can accommodate properties representing construction types that are
unusual or widely practiced, that are innovative or traditional, that are "high style" or
The key
vernacular, that are the work of a famous architect or an unknown master craftsman.
to determining whether the characteristics or associations of a particular property are
significant is to consider the property within its historic context.
After identifying the relevant historic context(s) with which the property is associated, the
four Criteria are applied to the property. Within the scope of the historic context, the
National Register Criteria define the kind of significance that the properties represent.
For example, within the context of "19th Century Gunpowder Production in the Brandywine
Valley," Criterion A would apply to those properties associated with important events in the
founding and development of the industry. Criterion B would apply to those properties
associated with persons who are significant in the founding of the industry or associated with
important inventions related to gunpowder manufacturing. Criterion C would apply to those
buildings, structures, or objects whose architectural form or style reflect important design
qualities integral to the industry. And Criterion D would apply to properties that can convey
information important in our understanding of this industrial process. If a property qualifies
under more than one of the Criteria, its significance under each should be considered, if
possible, in order to identify all aspects of its historical value.
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National Register Criteria for Evaluation
**
1.Criterion A: Event
2.Criterion B: Person
3.Criterion C: Design/Construction
4.Criterion D: Information Potential
**For a complete listing of the Criteria for Evaluation, refer to Part II of this bulletin
The National Register Criteria recognize different types of values embodied in districts,
sites, buildings, structures, and objects. These values fall into the following categories:
Associative value (Criteria A and B)
: Properties significant for their
association or linkage to events (Criteria A) or persons (Criteria B) important in
the past.
Design or Construction value (Criterion C)
: Properites significant as
representatives of the manmade expression of culture or technology.
Information value (Criterion D)
: Properties significant for their ability to
yield important information about prehistory or history.
CRITERION A: EVENT
Properties can be eligible for the National Register if they are associated with events
that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of our history.
Understanding Criterion A: Event
To be considered for listing under Criterion A, a property must be associated with one or
more events important in the defined historic context. Criterion A recognizes properties
associated with single events, such as the founding of a town, or with a pattern of events,
repeated activities, or historic trends, such as the gradual rise of a port city's prominence in
trade and commerce. The event or trends, however, must clearly be important within the
associated context: settlement, in the case of the town, or development of a maritime
economy, in the case of the port city. Moreover, the property must have an important
association with the event or historic trends, and it must retain historic integrity. (See Part V:
How to Evaluate a Property Within its Historic Context
.)
Several steps are involved in determining whether a property is significant for its associative
values:
Determine the nature and origin of the property,
Identify the historic context with which it is associated, and
Evaluate the property's history to determine whether it is associated with the historic
context in any important way.
Applying Criterion A: Event
Types of Events
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A property can be associated with either (or both) of two types of events:
A specific event marking an important moment in American prehistory or history and
A pattern of events or a historic trend that made a significant contribution to the
development of a community, a State, or the nation.
EXAMPLES OF PROPERTIES ASSOCIATED WITH EVENTS
Properties associated with specific events:
The site of a battle.
The building in which an important invention was developed.
A factory district where a significant strike occurred.
An archeological site at which a major new aspect of prehistory was discovered, such
as the first evidence of man and extinct Pleistocene animals being contemporaneous.
A site where an important facet of European exploration occurred.
Properties associated with a pattern of events:
A trail associated with western migration.
A railroad station that served as the focus of a community's transportation system and
commerce.
A mill district reflecting the importance of textile manufacturing during a given
period.
A building used by an important local social organization.
A site where prehistoric Native Americans annually gathered for seasonally available
resources and for social interaction.
A downtown district representing a town's growth as the commercial focus of the
surrounding agricultural area.
Association of the Property with the Events
The property you are evaluating must be documented, through accepted means of historical
or archeological research (including oral history), to have existed at the time of the event or
pattern of events and to have been associated with those events. A property is not eligible if
its associations are speculative. For archeological sites, well reasoned inferences drawn from
data recovered at the site can be used to establish the association between the site and the
events.
Significance of the Association
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Mere association with historic events or trends is not enough, in and of itself, to qualify
under Criterion A: the property's specific association must be considered important as well.
For example, a building historically in commercial use must be shown to have been
significant in commercial history.
Traditional Cultural Values
Traditional cultural significance is derived from the role a property plays in a community's
historically rooted beliefs, customs, and practices. Properties may have significance under
Criterion A if they are associated with events, or series of events, significant to the cultural
(For more information, refer to National Register Bulletin:
traditions of a community.
Guidelines for Evaluating and Documenting Traditional Cultural Properties.)
Eligible
A hilltop associated in oral historical accounts with the founding of an Indian tribe or
society is eligible.
A rural community can be eligible whose organization, buildings, or patterns of land
use reflect the cultural traditions valued by its long-term residents.
An urban neighborhood can be eligible as the traditional home of a particular cultural
group and as a reflection of its beliefs and practices.
Not Eligible
A site viewed as sacred by a recently established utopian or religious community does
not have traditional cultural value and is not eligible.
CRITERION B: PERSON
Properties may be eligible for the National Register if they are associated with the lives
of persons significant in our past.
(For further information on properties eligible under Criterion B, refer to National Register
Bulletin: Guidelines for Evaluating and Documenting Properties Associated with Significant
Persons.)
Understanding Criterion B: Person
Criterion B applies to properties associated with individuals whose specific contributions to
history can be identified and documented. Persons "significant in our past" refers to
individuals whose activities are demonstrably important within a local, State, or national
historic context. The criterion is generally restricted to those properties that illustrate (rather
than commemorate) a person's important achievements. (The policy regarding
How to
commemorative properties, birthplaces, and graves is explained further in Part VII:
Apply the Criteria Considerations
.)
Several steps are involved in determining whether a property is significant for its associative
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values under Criterion B. First, determine the importance of the individual. Second,
ascertain the length and nature of his/her association with the property under study and
identify the other properties associated with the individual. Third, consider the property
under Criterion B, as outlined below.
EXAMPLES OF PROPERTIES ASSOCIATED WITH PERSONS
Properties associated with a Significant Person:
The home of an important merchant or labor leader.
The studio of a significant artist.
The business headquarters of an important industrialst.
Applying Criterion B: Person
Significance of the Individual
The persons associated with the property must be individually significant within a historic
context. A property is not eligible if its only justification for significance is that it was
owned or used by a person who is a member of an identifiable profession, class, or social or
ethnic group. It must be shown that the person gained importance within his or her
profession or group.
Eligible
The residence of a doctor, a mayor, or a merchant is eligible under Criterion B if the
person was significant in the field of medicine, politics, or commerce, respectively.
Not Eligible
A property is not eligible under Criterion B if it is associated with an individual about
whom no scholarly judgement can be made because either research has not revealed
specific information about the person's activities and their impact, or there is
insufficient perspective to determine whether those activities or contributions were
historically important.
Association with the Property
Properties eligible under Criterion B are usually those associated with a person's productive
life, reflecting the time period when he or she achieved significance. In some instances this
may be the person's home; in other cases, a person's business, office, laboratory, or studio
may best represent his or her contribution. Properties that pre- or post-date an individual's
significant accomplishments are usually not eligible.
The individual's association with the property must be documented by accepted methods of
historical or archeological research, including written or oral history. Speculative
associations are not acceptable. For archeological sites, well reasoned inferences drawn from
data recovered at the site are acceptable.
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Comparison to Related Properties
Each property associated with an important individual should be compared to other
associated properties to identify those that best represent the person's historic contributions.
The best representatives usually are properties associated with the person's adult or
productive life. Properties associated with an individual's formative or later years may also
qualify if it can be demonstrated that the person's activities during this period were
historically significant or if no properties from the person's productive years survives.
Length of association is an important factor when assessing several properties with similar
associations.
A community or State may contain several properties eligible for associations with the same
important person, if each represents a different aspect of the person's productive life. A
property can also be eligible if it has brief but consequential associations with an important
individual. (Such associations are often related to specific events that occurred at the
property and, therefore, it may also be eligible under Criterion A.)
Association with Groups
For properties associated with several community leaders or with a prominent family, it is
necessary to identify specific individuals and to explain their significant accomplishments.
Eligible
A residential district in which a large number of prominent or influential merchants,
professionals, civic leaders, politicians, etc., lived will be eligible under Criterion B if
the significance of one or more specific individual residents is explicitly justified.
A building that served as the seat of an important family is eligible under Criterion B
if the significant accomplishments of one or more individual family members is
explicitly justified.
Not Eligible
A residential district in which a large number of influential persons lived is not
eligible under Criterion B if the accomplishments of a specific individual(s) cannot be
documented. If the significance of the district rests in the cumulative importance of
prominent residents, however, then the district might still be eligible under Criterion
A. Eligibility, in this case, would be based on the broad pattern of community
development, through which the neighborhood evolved into the primary residential
area for this class of citizens.
A building that served as the seat of an important family will not be eligible under
Criterion B if the significant accomplishments of individual family members cannot
be documented. In cases where a succession of family members have lived in a house
and collectively have had a demonstrably significant impact on the community, as a
family, the house is more likely to be significant under Criterion A for association
with a pattern of events.
Association with Living Persons
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Properties associated with living persons are usually not eligible for inclusion in the National
Register. Sufficient time must have elapsed to assess both the person's field of endeavor and
his/her contribution to that field. Generally, the person's active participation in the endeavor
must be finished for this historic perspective to emerge. (See Criteria Considerations C and
How to Apply the Criteria Considerations
G in Part VII:.)
Association with Architects/Artisans
Architects, artisans, artists, and engineers are often represented by their works, which are
eligible under Criterion C. Their homes and studios, however, can be eligible for
consideration under Criterion B, because these usually are the properties with which they are
most personally associated.
Native American Sites
The known major villages of individual Native Americans who were important during the
contact period or later can qualify under Criterion B. As with all Criterion B properties, the
individual associated with the property must have made some specific important
contribution to history. Examples include sites significantly associated with Chief Joseph
(For more information, refer to National Register Bulletin: Guidelines for
and Geronimo.
Evaluating and Documenting Traditional Cultural Properties.)
CRITERION C: DESIGN/CONSTRUCTION
Properties may be eligible for the National Register if they embody the distinctive
characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or that represent the work
of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or that represent a significant and
distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction.
Understanding Criterion C: Design/Construction
This criterion applies to properties significant for their physical design or construction,
including such elements as architecture, landscape architecture, engineering, and artwork.
To be eligible under Criterion C, a property must meet at least one of the following
requirements:
Embody distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction.
Represent the work of a master.
Possess high artistic value.
Represent a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack
individual distinction.
The first requirement, that properties "embody the distinctive characteristics of a type,
period, or method of construction," refers to the way in which a property was conceived,
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designed, or fabricated by a people or culture in past periods of history. "The work of a
master" refers to the technical or aesthetic achievements of an architect or craftsman. "High
artistic values" concerns the expression of aesthetic ideals or preferences and applies to
aesthetic achievement.
EXAMPLES OF PROPERTIES ASSOCIATED WITH DESIGN/CONSTRUCTION
Properties associated with design and construction:
A house or commercial building representing a significant style of architecture.
A designed park or garden associated with a particular landscape design philosophy.
A movie theater embodying high artistic value in its decorative features.
A bridge or dam representing technological advances.
Resources "that represent a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may
lack individual distinction" are called "districts." In the Criteria for Evaluation (as published
in the Code of Federal Regulations and reprinted in Part II), districts are defined within the
Districts, however, can be considered for eligibility under all the
context of Criterion C.
Criteria
, individually or in any combination, as is appropriate. For this reason, the full
How to Define Categories of Historic
discussion of districts is contained in Part IV:
Properties
. Throughout the bulletin, however, districts are mentioned within the context of a
specific subject, such as an individual Criterion.
Applying Criterion C: Design/Construction
Distinctive Characteristics of Type, Period, and Method of Construction
This is the portion of Criterion C under which most properties are eligible, for it
encompasses all architectural styles and construction practices. To be eligible under this
portion of the Criterion, a property must clearly illustrate, through "distinctive
characteristics," the following:
The pattern of features common to a particular class of resources,
The individuality or variation of features that occurs within the class,
The evolution of that class, or
The transition between classes of resources.
Distinctive Characteristics
: "Distinctive characteristics" are the physical features or traits
that commonly recur in individual types, periods, or methods of construction. To be eligible,
a property must clearly contain enough of those characteristics to be considered a true
representative of a particular type, period, or method of construction.
Characteristics can be expressed in terms such as form, proportion, structure, plan, style, or
materials. They can be general, referring to ideas of design and construction such as basic
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plan or form, or they can be specific, referring to precise ways of combining particular kinds
of materials.
Eligible
A building eligible under the theme of Gothic Revival architecture must have the
distinctive characteristics that make up the vertical and picturesque qualities of the
style, such as pointed gables, steep roof pitch, board and batten siding, and ornamental
bargeboard and veranda trim.
A late Mississippian village that illustrates the important concepts in prehistoric
community design and planning will qualify.
A designed historic landscape will qualify if it reflects a historic trend or school of
theory and practice, such as the City Beautiful Movement, evidencing distinguished
design, layout, and the work of skilled craftsmanship.
Not Eligible
A commercial building with some Art Deco detailing is not eligible under Criterion C
if the detailing was added merely as an afterthought, rather than fully integrated with
overall lines and massing typical of the Art Deco style or the transition between that
and another style.
A designed landscape that has had major changes to its historic design, vegetation,
original boundary, topography/grading, architectural features, and circulation system
will not qualify.
Type, Period, and Method of Construction
:
"Type, period, or method of construction" refers to the way certain properties are related to
one another by cultural tradition or function, by dates of construction or style, or by choice
or availability of materials and technology.
A structure is eligible as a specimen of its type or period of construction if it is an important
example (within its context) of building practices of a particular time in history. For
properties that represent the variation, evolution, or transition of construction types, it must
be demonstrated that the variation, etc., was an important phase of the architectural
development of the area or community in that it had an impact as evidenced by later
buildings. A property is not eligible, however, simply because it has been identified as the
only such property ever fabricated; it must be demonstrated to be significant as well.
Eligible
A building that has some characteristics of the Romanesque Revival style and some
characteristics of the Commercial style can qualify if it illustrates the transition of
architectural design and the transition itself is considered an important architectural
development.
A Hopewellian mound, if it is an important example of mound building construction
techniques, would qualify as a method or type of construction.
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A building which illustrates the early or the developing technology of particular
structural systems, such as skeletal steel framing, is eligible as an example of a
particular method of construction.
Historic Adaptation of the Original Property
A property can be significant not only for the way it was originally constructed or crafted,
but also for the way it was adapted at a later period, or for the way it illustrates changing
tastes, attitudes, and uses over a period of time.
A district is eligible under this guideline if it illustrates the evolution of historic character of
a place over a particular span of time.
Eligible
A Native American irrigation system modified for use by Europeans could be eligible
if it illustrates the technology of either or both periods of construction.
An early 19th century farmhouse modified in the 1880s with Queen Anne style
ornamentation could be significant for the modification itself, if it represented a local
variation or significant trend in building construction or remodelling, was the work of
a local master (see Works of a Master below), or reflected the tastes of an important
person associated with the property at the time of its alteration.
A district encompassing the commercial development of a town between 1820 and
1910, characterized by buildings of various styles and eras, can be eligible.
Works of a Master
A master is a figure of generally recognized greatness in a field, a known craftsman of
consummate skill, or an anonymous craftsman whose work is distinguishable from others by
its characteristic style and quality. The property must express a particular phase in the
development of the master's career, an aspect of his or her work, or a particular idea or
theme in his or her craft.
A property is not eligible as the work of a master, however, simply because it was designed
by a prominent architect. For example, not every building designed by Frank Lloyd Wright
is eligible under this portion of Criterion C, although it might meet other portions of the
Criterion, for instance as a representative of the Prairie style.
The work of an unidentified craftsman is eligible if it rises above the level of workmanship
of the other properties encompassed by the historic context.
Properties Possessing High Artistic Values
High artistic values may be expressed in many ways, including areas as diverse as
community design or planning, engineering, and sculpture. A property is eligible for its high
artistic values if it so fully articulates a particular concept of design that it expresses an
aesthetic ideal. A property is not eligible, however, if it does not express aesthetic ideals or
design concepts more fully than other properties of its type.
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Eligible
A sculpture in a town square that epitomizes the design principles of the Art Deco
style is eligible.
A building that is a classic expression of the design theories of the Craftsman Style,
such as carefully detailed handwork, is eligible.
A landscaped park that synthesizes early 20th century principles of landscape
architecture and expresses an aesthetic ideal of environment can be eligible.
Properties that are important representatives of the aesthetic values of a cultural group,
such as petroglyphs and ground drawings by Native Americans, are eligible.
Not Eligible
A sculpture in a town square that is a typical example of sculpture design during its
period would not qualify for high artistic value, although it might be eligible if it were
significant for other reasons.
A building that is a modest example (within its historic context) of the Craftsman
Style of architecture, or a landscaped park that is characteristic of turn of the century
landscape design would not qualify for high artistic value.
A Significant and Distinguishable Entity Whose Components May Lack Individual
Distinction:
This portion of Criterion C refers to districts. For detailed information on
districts, refer to Part IV of this bulletin.
CRITERION D: INFORMATION POTENTIAL
Properties may be eligible for the National Register if they have yielded, or may be
likely to yield, information important in prehistory or history.
Understanding Criterion D: Information Potential
Certain important research questions about human history can only be answered by the
actual physical material of cultural resources. Criterion D encompasses the properties that
have the potential to answer, in whole or in part, those types of research questions. The most
common type of property nominated under this Criterion is the archeological site (or a
district comprised of archeological sites). Buildings, objects, and structures (or districts
comprised of these property types), however, can also be eligible for their information
potential.
both
Criterion D has two requirements, which must be met for a property to qualify:
The property must have, or have had, information to contribute to our understanding
of human history or prehistory, and
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The information must be considered important.
Under the first of these requirements, a property is eligible if it has been used as a source of
data and contains more, as yet unretrieved data. A property is also eligible if it has not yet
yielded information but, through testing or research, is determined a likely source of data.
Under the second requirement, the information must be carefully evaluated within an
appropriate context to determine its importance. Information is considered "important" when
it is shown to have a significant bearing on a research design that addresses such areas as: 1)
current data gaps or alternative theories that challenge existing ones or 2) priority areas
identified under a State or Federal agency management plan.
Applying Criterion D: Information Potential
Archeological Sites
likely
Criterion D most commonly applies to properties that contain or are to contain
information bearing on an important archeological research question. The property must
have characteristics suggesting the likelihood that it possesses configurations of artifacts,
soil strata, structural remains, or other natural or cultural features that make it possible to do
the following:
Test a hypothesis or hypotheses about events, groups, or processes in the past that bear
on important research questions in the social or natural sciences or the humanities; or
Corroborate or amplify currently available information suggesting that a hypothesis is
either true or false; or
Reconstruct the sequence of archeological cultures for the purpose of identifying and
explaining continuities and discontinuities in the archeological record for a particular
area.
Buildings, Structures, and Objects
While most often applied to archeological districts and sites, Criterion D can also apply to
buildings, structures, and objects that contain important information. In order for these types
of properties to be eligible under Criterion D, they themselves must be, or must have been,
the principal source of the important information.
Eligible
A building exhibiting a local variation on a standard design or construction technique
can be eligible if study could yield important information, such as how local
availability of materials or construction expertise affected the evolution of local
building development.
Not Eligible
The ruins of a hacienda once contained murals that have since been destroyed.
Historical documentation, however, indicates that the murals were significant for their
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highly unusual design. The ruins can not be eligible under Criterion D for the
importance of the destroyed murals if the information is contained only in the
documentation.
Association with Human Activity
A property must be associated with human activity and be critical for understanding a site's
historic environment in order to be eligible under Criterion D. A property can be linked to
human activity through events, processes, institutions, design, construction, settlement,
migration, ideals, beliefs, lifeways, and other facets of the development or maintenance of
cultural systems.
The natural environment associated with the properties was often very different from that of
the present and strongly influenced cultural development. Aspects of the environment that
are pertinent to human activities should be considered when evaluating properties under
Criterion D.
Natural features and paleontological (floral and faunal) sites are not usually eligible under
Criterion D in and of themselves. They can be eligible, however, if they are either directly
related to human activity or critical to understanding a site's historic environment. In a few
cases, a natural feature or site unmarked by cultural materials, that is primarily eligible under
Criterion A, may also be eligible under Criterion D, if study of the feature, or its location,
setting, etc. (usually in the context of data gained from other sources), will yield important
information about the event or period with which it is associated.
Establishing a Historic Context
The information that a property yields, or will yield, must be evaluated within an appropriate
historic context. This will entail consulting the body of information already collected from
similar properties or other pertinent sources, including modern and historic written records.
The researcher must be able to anticipate if and how the potential information will affect the
definition of the context. The information likely to be obtained from a particular property
must confirm, refute, or supplement in an important way existing information.
not
A property is eligible if it cannot be related to a particular time period or cultural group
and, as a result, lacks any historic context within which to evaluate the importance of the
information to be gained.
Developing Research Questions
Having established the importance of the information that may be recovered, it is necessary
to be explicit in demonstrating the connection between the important information and a
specific property. One approach is to determine if specific important research questions can
be answered by the data contained in the property. Research questions can be related to
property-specific issues, to broader questions about a large geographic area, or to theoretical
issues independent of any particular geographic location. These questions may be derived
from the academic community or from preservation programs at the local, regional, State, or
national level. Research questions are usually developed as part of a "research design,"
which specifies not only the questions to be asked, but also the types of data needed to
supply the answers, and often the techniques needed to recover the data.
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Eligible
When a site consisting of a village occupation with midden deposits, hearths,
ceramics, and stratified evidence of several occupations is being evaluated, three
possible research topics could be: 1) the question of whether the site occupants were
indigenous to the area prior to the time of occupation or recent arrivals, 2) the
investigation of the settlement-subsistence pattern of the occupants, 3) the question of
whether the region was a center for the domestication of plants. Specific questions
could include: A) Do the deposits show a sequential development or sudden
introduction of Ceramic Type X? B) Do the dates of the occupations fit our
expectations based on the current model for the reoccupation behavior of slash-and-
burn agriculturalists? C) Can any genetic changes in the food plant remains be
detected?
Not Eligible
A property is not eligible if so little can be understood about it that it is not possible to
determine if specific important research questions can be answered by data contained
in the property.
Establishing the Presence of Adequate Data
To support the assertion that a property has the data necessary to provide the important
information, the property should be investigated with techniques sufficient to establish the
presence of relevant data categories. What constitutes appropriate investigation techniques
would depend upon specific circumstances including the property's location, condition, and
the research questions being addressed, and could range from surface survey (or
photographic survey for buildings), to the application of remote sensing techniques or
intensive subsurface testing. Justification of the research potential of a property may be
based on analogy to another better known property if sufficient similarities exist to establish
the appropriateness of the analogy.
Eligible
Data requirements depend on the specific research topics and questions to be
addressed. To continue the example in "Developing Research Questions" above, we
might want to ascertain the following with reference to questions A, B, and C: A) The
site contains Ceramic Type X in one or more occupation levels and we expect to be
able to document the local evaluation of the type or its intrusive nature. B) The hearths
contain datable carbon deposits and are associated with more than one occupation. C)
The midden deposits show good floral/faunal preservation, and we know enough
about the physical evolution of food plants to interpret signs that suggest
domestication.
Not Eligible
Generally, if the applicable research design requires clearly stratified deposits, then
subsurface investigation techniques must be applied. A site composed only of surface
materials can not be eligible for its potential to yield information that could only be
found in stratified deposits.
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Integrity
The assessment of integrity for properties considered for information potential depends on
the data requirements of the applicable research design. A property possessing information
visually
potential does not need to recall an event, person, process, or construction
technique. It is important that the significant data contained in the property remain
sufficiently intact to yield the expected important information, if the appropriate study
techniques are employed.
Eligible
An irrigation system significant for the information it will yield on early engineering
practices can still be eligible even though it is now filled in and no longer retains the
appearance of an open canal.
Not Eligible
A plowed archeological site contains several superimposed components that have
been mixed to the extent that artifact assemblages cannot be reconstructed. The site
cannot be eligible if the data requirements of the research design call for the study of
artifacts specific to one component.
Partly Excavated or Disturbed Properties
The current existence of appropriate physical remains must be ascertained in considering a
property's ability to yield important information. Properties that have been partly excavated
or otherwise disturbed and that are being considered for their potential to yield additional
important information must be shown to retain that potential in their remaining portions.
Eligible
A site that has been partially excavated but still retains substantial intact deposits (or a
site in which the remaining deposits are small but contain critical information on a
topic that is not well known) is eligible.
Not Eligible
A totally collected surface site or a completely excavated buried site is not eligible
since the physical remains capable of yielding important information no longer exist at
the site. (See Completely Excavated Sites, below, for exception.) Likewise, a site that
has been looted or otherwise disturbed to the extent that the remaining cultural
materials have lost their important depositional context (horizontal or vertical location
of deposits) is not eligible.
A reconstructed mound or other reconstructed site will generally not be considered
eligible, because original cultural materials or context or both have been lost.
Completely Excavated Sites
Properties that have yielded important information in the past and that no longer retain
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additional research potential (such as completely excavated archeological sites) must be
assessed essentially as historic sites under Criterion A. Such sites must be significant for
associative values related to: 1) the importance of the data gained or 2) the impact of the
property's role in the history of the development of anthropology/archeology or other
relevant disciplines. Like other historic properties, the site must retain the ability to convey
its association as the former repository of important information, the location of historic
events, or the representative of important trends.
Eligible
A property that has been excavated is eligible if the data recovered was of such
importance that it influenced the direction of research in the discipline, as in a site that
clearly established the antiquity of the human occupation of the New World.
Not Eligible
A totally excavated site that at one time yielded important information but that no
longer can convey either its historic/prehistoric utilization or significant modern
investigation is not eligible.
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Comments or Questions
JPJ
http://www.nps.gov/nr/publications/bulletins/nrb15/nrb15_6.htm05/12/2011