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Dear Zooarchers

 

Following something of a delay, we are pleased to post the abbreviated
minutes of the first meeting of The Professional Zooarchaeology Working
Group (PZWG).  Details about the group are currently held on the
following website: 

 

http://www.arch.soton.ac.uk/Centres/LSZ/The%20Professional%20Zooarchaeol
ogy%20Group.htm

 

In the near future, the PZWG homepage will be hosted by the English
Heritage Environmental Archaeology website:

 

 http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/Environmental_Archaeology  

 

 

Professional Zooarchaeology Working Group (PZWG)

 

The first PZWG meeting (held on the 30th July at Fort Cumberland) was a
great success - there is obviously a lot of enthusiasm and willingness
to collaborate, share information and provide support. This will be the
main benefit of the group.

 

After discussing the state of British zooarchaeology, it became very
clear that many of us working in the commercial world are stuck in a
vicious cycle: we have a wish to produce research reports of high
standard but are given no time or support to achieve this; the result
being the production of basic analysis, which confirms wider opinion
that zooarchaeology is of little importance - the net effect being that
funding and support are withdrawn further. All of us have a role to play
in breaking this cycle and ensuring that the standard and profile of
zooarchaeological research is raised across the board. At the meeting we
agreed that:

 

1) Freelance and unit-based specialists will try and assert their rights
to site visits and research time, thus allowing their work to be placed
in a regional, national and theoretical context

 

2) University-based members will provide support in terms of resources:
reference collections, libraries, scientific analysis, funding
applications.

 

3) English Heritage will continue to be proactive in highlighting the
importance and benefits of zooarchaeological research to organisations
involved in excavation and analysis - they are currently running a
series of national training days for archaeological curators, project
managers and consultants.

 

 

It is recognised that it will take time for some of these changes to be
made. In the meantime, to make our lives easier, we will implement the
following initiatives:

 

a) Make our grey literature available. Dr. Alan Hall who manages the
Environmental Archaeology Bibliography (EAB) (see Archaeology Data
Service (ADS) website) has agreed to make information about grey
literature available through this database.  Procedures for submission
of grey literature details and reports will be provided soon.

 

b) Provision of an informal peer-review service. Members, particularly
those working in isolation, will have the option of sending their
reports to other members of the group for informal comment.

 

c) Work together to develop our reference collections.

 

 

It is hoped that the very existence of the group will, throughout the
year, help the state of British Zooarchaeology. At six-monthly meetings
the group will come together for one-day workshops on aspects of
practical or theoretical archaeology.

 

The next meeting will be held at the University of Leicester on the 21st
January 2006, the theme is Palaeopathology and will be organised by Jen
Browning, Matty Holmes and Richard Thomas. More details will be sent to
members nearer the time. 

 

 

 

Polydora Baker

Zooarchaeologist

English Heritage

Research Department

Fort Cumberland

Fort Cumberland Rd.

Eastney, Portsmouth

P04 9LD

Tel.: 02392 856774 

FAX: 02392 856701

 


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