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Ok(Okay) DIK,
As for treasures(,) how come (did - word not needed) the guys (went) (go - word not needed) up and recover(ed) the( )B-17 in Cananda(Canada?) (Was)was it because it was there(,) no(?) (It was) because it(')s worht(worth) $$$(,) which means it (is) a treasure correct.(?)
The answer is NO. It was/is just a recovered aircraft. A treasure will be spent on restoring it though.
As for the Arch(aeology) guys invovled(involved) with the B-25(,) they actually did a( )lot of on site work(.) (They)they mape(mapped) the wreck before it was raised (and) took plenty of photos after it was raised.
So now we know how the bottom of the lake looked before and after the aircraft was removed. And I guess that all of the people that took pictures of the aircraft can now call themselves archaeologists.
The B-17C has been protected for close to 35 years(.) I should know(,) I try(tried) to get permission to recover a( )lot of stuff out of the calf. (Calif.) State and Federal Lands and was told that most of the stuff fall(fell) under the 1966 HPH and the 1993 WWII admenment (amendment). Question DIK(,) have you ever read the HPA? I have(,) and have a working knowledge of the 1970 UNESCO Heritage Act.
Can't really say that I ever read any of these items, and can't say that I really care what they have to say. If I choose to visit a wreck site and I find something of interest, I dare say that I'll pick it up and take it, as 99% of any site visiters would do.
K5083,
So all the work that my little group as(has) ben(been) doing on the search for "The White Bird" doesn't count for(as) Archaealogy(,) and(as too) the stuff that TIGHAR has done on Amelia (Earhart)(grant(ed,) (it - word not needed) they or(are) idiots)(.) (And) isn't the very nature of these two searchs (are - word not needed) based on the most basic of Archaeological searchs.
The answer is NO. Both searches are simply looking for something to prove their points of view. So far neither has.
So(,) if a plane is missing and we start looking for (it by,) IE(i.e.) The(the) P-51 Thread(,) (and) using all the know(known) resource (data,) then its(it's) not Arch(aeology)? The answer is NO, it's called RESEARCH. (And) so(,) what Robert Ballard did when he was looking for the Titanic/Lustania/Bismark and the Midway Carriers(,) and what The Naval History Center did with there(their) search for The CSS Hundley and USS Monitor isn't a form of modern Archaealogy.
Ballard would have everything rot on the sea floor, to be seen by only the rich, but he screwed up with the Titanic and now everyone can see artifacts from that tragedy. It makes it a lot more personal. As for the others, what do they have to do with aircraft wrecks?
Last time I was in a classroom that is how it(')s taught(,) but then again my degree doesn't mean squat then(,) right.
You said it, not me.
Yes(,) there are folks who go out and(to) find a wreck and don't follow any Arch(aeology) stuff(,) but they take photos of the recovery and use documintaion(documentation) on the aircraft(.) (Isn't)isn't that a form of Arch(aeology)? (Oh)oh wait(,) I'm sorry(,) that(')s not how they do stuff on some indian burial site or is it.
Some people do take pictures, I know I did when we recovered the Martin B-26s in Canada. But that was for the story I wrote, more than anything else, and did nothing to aid in the restorations. I would also think that the recovery of the A-25 was photographed, but I doubt that the pictures will be of much help in that restoration. And, Native American burial sites have nothing to do with aircraft wrecks, unless, of course, the aircraft crashes into one.
"So, once again, there is NO such thing as Aviation Archaeology. Just because you dig a hole doesn't make you an archaeologist."
This statement still holds true.
Actually(,) yes it does(,) how do you explain all the sites that have been found like Troy/Hanging Gardens/Valley of the Kings ect.(,) ect.(,) ect.(?) (They)they were all holes dug in the ground(,) but(,) oh wait(,) you say that there(they're) not Archaeology right.
I say that they too have nothing to do with aircraft crash sites. But if digging a hole makes you an archaeologist, than I'm an archaeologist, because I've dug a lot of holes in my time. And I guess digging a hole for a cellar makes the digger an archaeologist, digging fence post holes makes the digger an archaelogist, and I guess that digging a hole for a swimming pool makes the diggers archaeologists too.
Oh well.
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