Transcript Slide 1
This document is contained within the Fire Management
Toolbox on Wilderness.net. Since other related resources
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e. All toolboxes are products of the Arthur Carhart National
Wilderness Training Center.
Heritage Resources Management
and the
Wildland Fire Suppression
Undertaking
Heritage Resources Program: Overview
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Purpose
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Project Examples
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Assist FS program areas
maintaining ongoing compliance w/
heritage laws and policies while
planning and implementing projects.
Timber sales/veg. mgmt.
Wilderness maintenance projects
Prescribed fire
Wildland fire suppression
Who does the work?
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Archaeologists
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Historic
Pre-Contact
Industrial
Historians
Historic Preservationists
Architectural Historians/Historic
Architects
Mandating Preservation and Stewardship:
Heritage Resources Law and Policy
• Federal Law
– Archaeological
Resources Protection Act
(ARPA)
– Native American Graves
Protection and
Repatriation Act
(NAGPRA)
– National Historic
Preservation Act (NHPA)
• Agency Policy
– FSM 2360
– Forest Plans
Archaeological Resource Protection Act
(Public Law 96-95)
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Enacted in 1979.
Forbids removal of archaeological
resources from federal or tribal
lands w/ out permit.
Forbids the sale, purchase,
exchange or transport of
archaeological materials removed
in violation of ARPA.
Archaeological Site = 100 yrs or
more in age.
This is a criminal law with
substantial fines and jail sentences
meted out upon conviction.
Confiscation of all personal
property used in violation.
Many successful prosecutions
since enactment.
Native American Grave Protection and Repatriation Act
(Public Law 101-601)
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Enacted in 1990.
The bulk of the law mandates the
repatriation of culturally identifiable
human remains, burial goods and
“items of cultural patrimony” to
appropriate First Nations groups.
“Inadvertent Discovery”
– What to do?
• Stop all activity in the area.
• Protect the site.
• Notify coroner of local
jurisdiction and law
enforcement.
• Notify heritage staff.
What to do issues are addressed in
a Plan of Action (POA) developed
by each agency.
National Historic Preservation Act
(Public Law 89-665)
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Enacted in 1966.
Sets up the historic
preservation system for the
US.
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Provides oversight agency
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Established the National
Register of Historic Places
Section 106
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Advisory Council on Historic
Preservation
State Historic Preservation
Officers/Tribal Historic
Preservation Officers
Mandates federal agencies to
review the effects their
projects may have on heritage
resources and mitigate those
effects in consultation w/ the
ACHP/SHPO
Section 110
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Federal agencies are
responsible for their own
heritage concerns.
Agency heritage resource
programs
Heritage Resource Site Types
• Building/Compound
• Structure
• Archaeological Site
– Three elements
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Artifacts
Ecofacts
Features
Ruins
– Historic
– Precontact
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Grave/Cemetery
Monument
Rock Art
Traditional Cultural Property
Fire Effects
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Fire
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Direct
• Burn/incineration
– Buildings/Structures
– Ruins
– Artifacts
• Soil/sediment distrurbance
Indirect
• Erosion
• Visual exposure of sites make it
easy for pot hunters to find
them.
Suppression Activities
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Line Construction
• Hand line
• Dozer line
Safety zone construction
Spike camp activities
Retardant/water drops
High pressure hose
Remote helipad construction
Protection Measures
• Exclusionary Tactics
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Line construction
Foaming
Sprinkler systems
Covering w/ fire retardant
material
– Brushing, cutting…
• Non-exclusionary Tactics
– Prescribed fire
– Fuel reduction
– Removal of artifacts
Protection Measures
Resource Advisor Support to Heritage Resources
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Advocate for heritage support to fire if
there is none.
Inadvertent discoveries w/ out heritage
staff member around?
– Archaeological site/Historic site
• GPS: get a UTM of the
estimated mid-point of the
site...
• Take a picture
• Protect the site
– Burial
• Run away and forget you ever
seen it…
• Kidding…
• Protect the site, keep location
confidential
• Get a hold of law enforcement
and local coroner…
• Notify on-Forest Heritage staff
ASAP..
Encourage/advocate for the use of MIST
tactics… Heritage loves them too.
Remember, according to provisions in
ARPA and the NHPA site information is
confidential…