Louisiana Administrative Code
Title 25 - CULTURAL RESOURCES
Part I - Office of Cultural Development
Chapter 1 - Division of Archeology
Subchapter E - Program
Section I-175 - Archaeological Program
Universal Citation: LA Admin Code I-175
Current through Register Vol. 50, No. 9, September 20, 2024
A. The commission, acting through its officers, staff, employees, committees and contractors, in order to implement and supplement the directives of R.S. 41:1607, shall inaugurate a program of activities in archaeology which will include, but not be limited to, the following endeavors:
1. revise, extend,
improve, and promote the Registry of State Archaeological
Landmarks;
2. contribute
to the public awareness and understanding of the state's historic and
prehistoric resources by:
a. designing and
maintaining a system of exhibits and interpretive displays;
b. issuing regular news releases to the
public media;
c. providing a series
of accurate and informative publications directed to the nonprofessional
audience;
d. cooperating with state
archaeological societies;
e. making
commission records, files, and expertise available to students from all
institutions of higher education;
f. developing a lecture program and
audio-visual aids suitable for use by civic and school groups within the
state;
3. encourage
participation by private landowners in the process of conservation,
preservation, and investigation of prehistoric and historic
resources;
4. undertake a
comprehensive survey of the entire state and its offshore waters to determine
the full extent of existing nonrenewable cultural resources;
5. prepare and keep up-to-date a priority
list of specific investigations that must be conducted in order to satisfy the
objectives of the commission's long-range research strategy. Except in the case
of sites threatened with immediate destruction, contracts should be assigned
partially on the basis of what the proposed project can contribute to the
solution of such overall research problems. Budget requests as well should
reflect the priority of investigations;
6. undertake a legislative study exercise to
determine the need, if any, for changes in state law to achieve the goals of
the commission's program as stated herein;
7. investigate the need for additional
regulations to implement Public Law 93-291, adopted May 24, 1974, by the
Congress of the United States;
8.
standardize the state's archaeological data base by and after interaction and
cooperation with all agencies and institutions of higher education actively
investigating the history and prehistory of Louisiana. Through standardization
of forms used in recording archaeological data and through development of a
computer program to process such data, the results of all archaeology conducted
within the state shall be made available to and be in a form utilizable by all
other archaeologists participating in the system;
9. inform state agencies, departments, and
other instrumentalities including subdivisions, special districts, law
enforcement officers, and other units of local government of all registered
state archaeological landmarks and the regulations pertaining
thereto;
10. publish both popular
and professional articles of scientific, historic, and prehistoric
merit;
11. inform all state
agencies, departments, and other instrumentalities of the commission's program,
the benefits to be derived from such work, the law pertaining thereto, and the
regulations adopted to execute such program;
12. nominate through prescribed channels all
state archaeological landmarks determined by the commission to be of major
scientific and educational value for inclusion on the National Register of
Historic Places. The National Register program will be explained to landowners
at the same time sites on private lands are being registered as
landmarks;
13. establish and
maintain liaisons with archaeological organizations in both the professional
and amateur categories for the purpose of:
a.
determining the need for action by the commission;
b. identifying new items to include in the
program;
c. assessing the need for
amendment, repeal or rewriting of the regulations;
d. obtaining input of ideas for better
carrying out the purposes, goals, and objectives of the commission;
e. facilitating the preservation,
conservation, and proper utilization of the archaeological resources of the
state;
14. support
federal, state, and private agencies, political subdivisions, and firms in
determining the impact of proposed construction projects on all historic and
prehistoric resources. The commission may, at its discretion, accept an
existing archaeological resources statement, provided that a recent ground
survey has been conducted by a professional archaeologist in support of the
statement. The commission may also contract with another agency, political
subdivision, or firm whose staff includes a professional archaeologist to
survey the construction area and to prepare an archaeological resource
statement;
15. seek to establish
and solicit private support for the Louisiana Archaeological Council.
Membership in the council will be open to all professional archaeologists
located or working in the state of Louisiana. The council will meet quarterly,
whenever possible in conjunction with any other archaeological meeting. The
council will serve as an advisory body to the Louisiana Archaeological Survey
and Antiquities Commission. It will contribute to a coordinated state
archaeological program by providing a medium through which the fruition of
on-going investigations can be shared and research assignments can be allocated
on a voluntary basis;
16. design,
sponsor, and maintain a permanent storage and research facility to be called
the "Louisiana Center for the Study of Man". Such a building will:
a. serve as permanent headquarters for the
commission;
b. provide safe,
atmospherically controlled, and perpetual storage for the state's historic and
prehistoric resources;
c. house the
central state archaeological survey files;
d. contain efficient and adequate facilities
for the treatment, preservation, and processing of recovered remains of all
types;
e. be the center for
uniform, up-to-date type collections of the state's historic and prehistoric
artifacts;
f. supply exhibit space
for outstanding archaeological specimens deserving of public viewing;
g. provide safe and accessible storage for
photographs, books, records, maps, and documents pertaining to Louisiana
history and prehistory;
h.
facilitate the utilization of collections and field data in the custody of the
commission in a manner which encourages maximum analysis and
interpretation;
i. serve as a
primary research facility for all professional archaeologists, scientists, and
students who are interested in and actively studying the history and prehistory
of human settlement in the state of Louisiana.
AUTHORITY NOTE: Promulgated in accordance with R.S. 41:1601-1613.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Louisiana may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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