Subject: National Center for Preservation Technology & Training
In 1986, the U.S. Office of Technology Assessment issued a report entitled "Technologies for Prehistoric and Historic Preservation," based on a series of workshops held in 1985 and 1986. One of its core recommendations was to call for the creation of a Federal Center for Preservation Technology. Now, as a result of initiatives from a number of different quarters--and many readers of this discussion group may have been involved in these initiatives -- this new Center is actively moving forward. As a result of the passage of P.L. 102-575 (Title IV) in 1992, the National Center for Preservation Technology & Training is established at Northwestern State University (NSU) in Natchitoches, Louisiana. Several preliminary reports have been, and are being, prepared to determine the focus of the Center without duplicating the work of other National Park Service units or other organizations already working in the field. Five functions have been identified for the Center: 1. To develop and distribute preservation and conservation skills and technologies for the identification, evaluation, treatments, monitoring, and interpretation of prehistoric and cultural resources; 2. To develop and facilitate training for Federal, State, tribal, and local cultural resource professionals, cultural resource managers, technicians, and others working in the preservation field; 3. To apply technology benefits from research by other agencies and institutions to the preservation field; 4. To facilitate the transfer of preservation technology among Federal agencies, State, tribal, and local governments, universities, national and international organizations, and the private sector; and 5. To cooperate with related international organizations including, but not limited to, the International Council on Monuments and Sites, the International Center for the Study of Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property, the International Institute for Conservation, and the International Council on Museums. The acting director of the Center has requested one of the participating institutions, the U.S. Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites (US/ICOMOS) for its recommendations concerning national and international databases and other types of information resources that the Center might make available. The ICOMOS report will also propose an information management structure, and some suggestions for developing new databases for the preservation community. It is our intention that the Center should be able to provide technical and financial assistance to organizations for this purpose. We have identified already a wide range of internet resources, especially gopher and web servers, and discussion groups. However, we would be very glad to have the comments of this list on how the goals of the Center might best be met; and how the Center could best serve your institution or discipline. For instance: * the Center should certainly run gopher and web servers, making available information about individual NPS parks and sites, as well as making fully available the National Register and other national inventories; * the Center could offer to provide an archive for all relevant Internet/Bitnet discussion groups, adding a wais search engine to query all archives simultaneously; * the Center could facilitate (technically and/or financially) the linking of State Historic Preservation Offices to the Internet, together with the relevant databases that those offices operate; * the Center could actively participate in the development and use of Open GIS to allow geographic applications to query data sets in many different computer environments; * the Center could work actively with kindred organizations in both the U.S. and abroad to develop a global network of shared resources. The list of possible activities is vast, and one of the challenges will be to prioritize its tasks. We encourage interested readers to submit ideas and other suggestions--as well as cautions -- for inclusion in the Center's work program, which will be prepared over the next several months. Readers may respond either to the writer, at the address given below, to the List if the subject merits discussion, or to the acting director of the Center, E. Blaine Cliver, Chief, Preservation Assistance Division, National Park Service <ecliver [at] cap__gwu__edu>. Peter H. Stott Peter Stott Heritage Conservation US ICOMOS / ICOMOS Canada *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:70 Distributed: Thursday, April 7, 1994 Message Id: cdl-7-70-009 ***Received on Wednesday, 6 April, 1994