Orange County NC Website
4 <br />not correspond to current locations. For example, the comparison of a sequence of historic maps <br />may reveal the history of how the road was originally placed on the landscape and how that <br />placement has changed through the years. Field testing historically recorded entity locations can <br />verify the maps and may provide information about the presence of historic structures, <br />landscapes, or artifact deposits such as trash dumps. This first task can be accomplished by <br />visually inspecting the corridor for suspected locations of historically recorded entities, such as <br />old road beds or above-ground structural remains, inspection of the surfaces of any plowed fields <br />or non-vegetated azeas, and by limited below-ground testing consisting of soil probing and <br />shovel-test-pit excavating. It should be stressed that this portion of the project will be very <br />narrowly focused by the results of background research. This is not designed to be a general <br />survey of the St. Mary's Corridor aimed at locating all historic cultural sites in the project area. <br />The second field testing task has as its goal the preliminazy assessment of the significance of any <br />historic archaeological locations, such as structures or artifact deposits, as may be found during <br />the project. This can be accomplished by limited data recovery operations such as controlled <br />surface collecting, or excavating test pits on sites that have been detected by azchival research. <br />The object of this task is to gather information about the cultural deposit by obtaining a sample <br />of the artifacts, and a description of the context in which they aze found. Data recovery efforts <br />implemented with this task are also expected to be very limited as predicated by the narrowly <br />focused research objectives and preliminary nature of the project's scope of work. <br />The third part of the field testing program consists of determining the potential for the <br />preservation and further recovery of historic azchaeological information from sites within the <br />corridor. This will be accomplished, in part, by assessing the results of the first two tasks. <br />Background research will provide the means of determining the potential for the existence of <br />historically recorded sites within the corridor. Field checking the azchival information will <br />provide a means of assessing the accuracy of the historic record, and will yield information about <br />the nature of site disturbance and artifact preservation. These data, together with settlement <br />models developed as part of the background reseazch, may then be used to make a reasonable <br />estimate of the azchaeological resources that lie within the St. Mary's Corridor project area. <br />Included in this will be an appraisal of the potential accessibility of these resources for future <br />azchaeological field testing. <br />Development of a Research Design <br />The development of a research design for further archaeological work will be based on the results <br />of background research and archaeological field testing. The design should (1) specify any <br />further azchival research necessary to identify historic sites or landscape features within the <br />project azea, (2) present a comprehensive plan for surveying the project area for historic and <br />prehistoric azchaeological resources, (3) describe the means whereby the sites will be tested and <br />recorded and the archaeological material analyzed and curated, and (4) indicate how the <br />assessment of the NRHP eligibility of the resources will be conducted in future reseazch. The <br />research design should also present a preliminary plan for integrating the preservation of <br />3 <br />