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Encyclopedia > County Archaeologist

A County Archaeologist is a local government employee in the United Kingdom with responsibility for overseeing development-led archaeological investigations required by PPG16. Nominated as the archaeological advisor by each local planning authority, the County Archaeologist recommends which developments are likely to threaten archaeological sites and advises methods of mitigating their impact, usually through the imposition of planning conditions.


Other responsibilities include maintaining the Sites and Monuments Record, managing the Portable Antiquities Scheme, education and outreach activities and co-ordinating research agendas.


In London the County Archaeologist's role is filled by English Heritage.


  Results from FactBites:
 
County May Appoint Staff Archaeologist (washingtonpost.com) (552 words)
Bob Bainbridge, a county planner, said that he has been trying to monitor the archaeological surveys and digs required of developers, but that he lacks the experience and time for the job.
The county also is refurbishing the Barnes House, a historic home of a prominent African American couple, and is overseeing a developer's restoration of the Lucasville School for Colored Children, a little red schoolhouse that opened in 1884 and closed in 1926.
The county archaeologist's job would be to inspect development sites and to determine whether archaeologists hired by developers should dig more extensively, Bainbridge said.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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